"If villagers refuse to serve as porters, SPDC and
DKBA troops will accuse them of supporting KNU guerrillas. Then, the soldiers
would have the right to kill villagers who refuse to work. In order to save
their own lives, five families left the village because they refused to work
SPDC orders. Three of them lived in jungle as IDPs and two of them joined the
KNU."

The situation of internally displaced people (IDPs), in Burma
remained critical throughout 2002. The U.S. State Department’s country report
for 2002 on Burma estimated that forced relocations had produced hundreds of
thousands of refugees, with as many as one million internally displaced persons.

"Throughout 2002 the military continued to forcibly relocate
minority villages, especially in areas where ethnic activists and rebels were
active, and in areas targeted for the development of international tourism."
(Human Rights Watch World Report 2003)

In 2002, Human Rights Watch reported that tens of thousands
of villagers in the ethnic insurgent areas remained in forced relocation sites
or were internally displaced. It has been estimated that in 2002 around 170
villages have been burned down and 300 villages have been forced to relocate, in
the Karen area alone. (Source: UN Wire) The most significant displacement has
occurred in the border ethnic areas where the military regime has been at war
with ethnic armed opposition groups for over 50 years. Ethnic minorities such as
the Muslim Rohingyas of Arakan State, the Shan, Karen, Kachin and the Karenni,
as well other smaller ethnic groups that live in the same areas have suffered
disproportionately. Whatever their background, internally displaced persons in
Burma live under conditions of severe deprivation and hardship. Almost all are
without adequate access to food or basic health and education services. A large
number of IDPs are women and children.

People in Burma become displaced as a result of SPDC policies
that either directly or indirectly compel them to leave their homes. Villagers
are subject to forced relocation by the SPDC as part of the military’s
four-cuts program; for urban resettlement or "beautification" projects,
which are often linked to the SPDC’s campaigns to promote tourism; and for rural
resettlement programs. People are also frequently left with no choice but to
flee their home villages when faced with resource scarcity, and the loss of
their security and livelihoods that result from oppressive SPDC policies.
Economic reasons for fleeing include: numerous demands for forced labor and
portering; government crop quotas; ceaseless taxes and fees to support the army;
army looting or destruction of property; and uncompensated loss of land or
property due to SPDC development projects. Even more pressing are people’s fears
of the torture, rape, arbitrary arrest and arbitrary killings perpetuated in
border areas by the military. Finally, villagers also often flee in anticipation
of forced relocation.

The majority of crossborder refugees report that before
arriving in refugee camps they had spent some time living as IDPs. Currently
however, those IDPs that would seek asylum in neighboring countries are finding
it much more difficult to flee Burma, due to increasing SPDC control of the
border, increased use of landmines in border areas, and the increasingly
restrictive policies on refugees adopted by neighboring governments.

Thai Policy towards IDPs

As a non-signatory to the 1951 International Convention on
Refugees and its’ 1967 protocol, Thailand argues that it is under no legal
compulsion to provide asylum for any refugees. Thailand does not allow the
establishment of any refugee camps for, and denies refugee status to, all people
from Shan state despite very heavy fighting there throughout 2002-03. The Shan
Human Rights Foundation estimates that since 1997 over 300,000 people in Shan
state have been forcibly relocated, and some 150,000 have sought refuge in
Thailand. The Thai government estimates that there are an estimated 110,000
refugees in Thailand, which represents only part of the Burmese IDP population.
(Source: Refugees International 2003) Only those refugees from recognized zones
of conflict, fleeing directly from fighting officially qualify as refugees in
Thailand. Refugees International reports that: "This confusion about who
actually qualifies to be called a refugee is compounded by the refuge-seekers
themselves. Rather than describe themselves by their starting point — i.e. the
reason they fled Burma — many people look to their present situation, i.e. their
status as illegal workers…Forced labor and forced relocation are human rights
abuses, they are not "economic reasons," and those people fleeing such
violations are escaping first and foremost from persecution." (Source:
Development of Democracy in Burma, Testimony to US Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations Subcommittee on East Asian and Pacific Affairs by Refugees
International,18, June, 2003) In addition, RI notes that the Thai army and
border police have effectively sealed off the border from IDPs seeking refuge.

"The displaced endure abuses rather than seeking asylum
because they know that coming to Thailand can be dangerous and that denial of
entry at the border happens routinely. News has trickled back inside Burma that
even if IDPs can find a secret route into Thailand, they may not be allowed into
refugee camps. There are no guarantees that they will be protected from abuse by
Thai authorities or receive humanitarian assistance. Thailand’s strict policy
towards refugees is achieving its goal of deterrence, causing IDPs to stay in
Burma at great risk to their security and well-being.

To qualify for refugee status in Thailand, Burmese must be
able to prove that they are "fleeing fighting," which is defined as literally
being shot at within hours or, at most, a few days of reaching the border. Only
a fraction of the three to four thousand people seeking asylum in Thailand each
month qualify as refugees under this narrow definition. As a result, many
refugees fleeing human rights abuses are rejected and left with few options for
protection and assistance. To make matters worse, in a further effort to deter
refugees from entering Thailand, the Thai authorities halted the entire refugee
screening process for the past year, leaving no mechanism available for refugees
to enter camps. The Royal Thai Government has so tightly circumscribed UNHCR’s
role in protecting refugees that, in effect, the UN refugee agency is unable to
carry out its core protection mandate along the border with Burma.

In summary, there are few options available for IDPs to find
a safe haven. Knowing of the threats they could encounter on their journey to
Thailand, the uncertainty of being allowed to cross the border, and the
likelihood that they will be denied access to refugee camps, many prefer to live
in hiding in the jungles or in government relocation sites, where on-going human
rights abuses and threats to their survival are a day to day reality." (Source:
Refugee International 2002)

Land Confiscation

The SPDC has subjected people to displacement for both
economic and security reasons. Government displacement programs have been in
place since the late 1960s, and possibly before. Since that time, under the
guise of regional or area development, private land and plantations from
civilians have been confiscated by the military - without any compensation - for
military plantations, farms or animal breeding ranches, or for the construction
of roads, railways, hydroelectric power plants, large dams and small scale
infrastructure projects. In addition, the regime has forced numerous urban
populations to move into areas away from city centres. In the 1990s the trend
has been for the military to displace civilians from cultivable land which is
then used for the construction of military bases or for income-generating
projects.

The "Four Cuts" Campaign

In the volatile border regions, displacement campaigns have
been aimed at securing combat zones, cutting off civilians support for
insurgents, and curtailing the activities of ethnic armed groups. These
activities fall under what the SPDC refers to as the ‘four-cuts’ policy.
This program was introduced in 1974 with the aim of cutting the supplies of 1),
food, 2) funds, 3) recruits, and 4) information to the resistance groups. In
some border areas which the regime had labeled brown areas, forced
relocation programs were carried out systematically. In other areas, which were
classified as black areas, all villages were destroyed, fields and paddy
barns were burnt, and anyone found in the area was shot. These campaigns against
civilians were intensified after the 1988 pro-democracy uprising. Currently
under the four-cuts campaign, villagers suspected of having contact with the
resistance are detained, tortured, and executed; regime troops systematically
extort and pillage villagers’ crops, food supplies, livestock, cash and
valuables; and villagers are forced to labor for army projects. Any village that
is suspected to be supporting the opposition is forced to relocate. In
1996-1997, the military regime launched programs to forcibly move or wipe out
all rural villages in areas not directly under the their control. As a result of
these intensified programs to destroy the populations in the ethnic areas, the
number of people displaced has continued to increase dramatically.

When a village is forced to relocate, the villagers are
usually told that they will not be permitted to go home until the opposition
groups have capitulated. The SPDC issues written orders addressed to village
headmen, which specifies the date by which the entire village must be relocated
to a designated site. Relocated persons are not compensated for their homes nor
are they given enough time to collect all of their belonging. Villagers must
leave behind the majority of their belongings, including their livestock. Often
people must also leave behind elderly and sick relatives. The areas cleared of
villagers are then designated as "free-fire" or black areas. Houses,
villages, and crops left behind are often pillaged and then dismantled and/or
scorched to prevent the return of villages. Villagers seen in the areas of their
former homes are considered to be rebel soldiers and shot on site. In some cases
landmines are laid on the roads leading into villages, or in abandoned fields
and homes.

Villagers forcibly relocated generally are required to move
to one of the areas designated as "relocation sites" by the SPDC. These sites
are most often located in other villages or towns near army bases, car-road
sites where there are no villages, and barren areas where there are no resources
or transportation. In the cases of urban resettlement or "beautification"
projects, the townspeople are moved to outlying areas of the city called
"satellite towns."

Satellite Towns

These new towns are made of populations forced to relocate by
the military government, and are located in the outskirts of cities, usually a
few miles out where there are very few facilities. In the last five years, the
junta has forcibly resettled tens of thousands of potentially restive poor
people from city centers into these distant slums. Clean water is scarce and
sanitation is poor in these slum areas. In addition, the people who are
relocated face great difficulty as public transportation into the cities is
either nonexistant, or else extremely poor and unreliable. Employment in the new
satellite towns is scarce. There are inadequately equipped schools in these
towns, but health care is a problem as the few clinics that exist are
understaffed and under supplied and the city hospitals (also understaffed and
under supplied) are difficult to get to.

The Relocation Sites

In most of the places that have been chosen as "relocation
sites" by the SPDC, little preparation or organization is done in order to
receive the displaced people. The SPDC is unconcerned whether or not water,
food, cultivatable land, employment and services are available in the new areas.
The burden for sheltering and caring for the displaced at relocation sites
generally falls on the local community. If the relocation site is part of, or
near another village or town, this extra burden results in increased depletion
of the resources of the original population. No humanitarian assistance comes
from the government, although at some sites there is very limited assistance
from church organizations. In some cases, rice has been distributed to the IDPs
during the initial relocation period, yet these rations are insufficient and the
distribution period is short. One refugee who came from the relocation site at
Mawchi in Karenni State stated that rice intended for the relocated people was
diverted and sold by local township authorities.

The SPDC troops force the villagers in the relocation sites
to work on a daily or weekly basis; generally one person from each family must
go. This forced labor includes clearing bushes and trees from the roadsides both
inside and outside the relocation sites, cleaning military buildings,
cultivating land for the military bases, hauling water for the troops, building
fences around the military camps, digging bunkers, road construction, portering
for the military and other general servant work. The villagers are also forced
to work in the infrastructure projects in the area. Moreover, they are made to
pay various fees for development projects, military funds, food for visiting
troops, and so on.

Services at the relocation villages vary from site to site,
as each site is under the responsibility of relevant state or township
committees. However, in general there are no arrangements made to provide
services for the relocated people.

Access to water varies – in some sites wells have
been dug in addition to streams and lakes. Yet in some sites, such as the Shadaw
relocation site in Karenni State, the lack of drinkable water has resulted in
several problems, including sickness and deaths caused by chemicals that were
added to the water in an attempt to clean it.

Sanitary facilities are usually nonexistent for the
IDPs and they either are required to build their own, or use outer areas of the
sites for latrine purposes.

The poor water and sanitation at the sites, among other
things, has resulted in higher levels of sickness and mortality, yet
health care facilities are either missing altogether, or else seriously
under-equipped and under-supplied.

There is no access to electricity in most
sites, and in some sites, such as Shadaw relocation site in Karenni State,
torches (flashlights) are banned and dry cell batteries are not permitted to be
sold in the site. This lack of provisions for night lighting increases the
vulnerability of women, among other things.

Education facilities are also insufficient or
nonexistent. In most cases, the relocated people establish makeshift schools
themselves. If there are pre-existing schools, school buildings, teaching
materials and teachers are never sufficient, and families often do not send
their children to school as they cannot afford the school costs, or they require
their children to help in the family’s attempts for survival. (See chapter on
health and education for more information)

At all relocation sites in Burma, access to farmland and
employment is a serious problem for the relocated villagers. In some sites, IDPs
are able to access farmland around the relocation site, yet this allocated land
is usually insufficient for basic survival or unsuitable for farming. In other
sites, access to surrounding land is denied, especially when villagers are
relocated to sites where local residents are already farming the land, either
for themselves or for the military. New refugee arrivals at the Thai border in
1999 reported that they had been able to find daily labor at local farms near
the relocation sites, earning between 40 and 120 kyats per day. In some cases,
villagers are permitted to return to their former farms and plantations, yet due
to the restrictions imposed on their trips out of the sites and the dangers
these villagers face outside of the sites, most are unable to make a living in
this way.

Villagers in relocation sites live in constant fear of the
violence and demands of the state forces, both inside and outside the relocation
sites. Villagers are not permitted to leave the sites without passes, which they
must purchase from either SPDC soldiers or local authorities. The passes are
usually only valid for 1 day, from dawn to dusk, although in rare cases week
passes have been granted. (see chapter on the freedom of movement) This leaves
the villagers little time to travel to their places of work, complete their
work, and then return. In addition, security for the villagers outside of the
relocation sites is notoriously bad. Villagers seen outside the camps are
vulnerable to capture, arrest, torture, and killing, even if they hold valid
passes, as they are accused by SPDC troops of leaving the camps to support rebel
forces. Women are especially vulnerable, and many cases of rape have been
reported by women who have gone outside the camp to forage for vegetables or get
water. (see chapter on women) The local authorities do nothing when cases of
abuse are reported to them by the villagers.

2) Displacement into areas under full SPDC control;

Many villagers suffering from abuse under the SPDC
four-cuts program, or who have been told to relocate without a specified
site have chosen to resettle in areas under full SPDC control, which they feel
are safer and more stable than the conflcit areas, or where they have friends or
relatives. Yet as most of the displaced villagers are farmers, they face many
difficulties when they are forced to move into new villages or towns. Available
land in these areas is often scarce and the search for other employment in new
areas is difficult. In larger towns or cities farmers are often forced to seek
work as day laborers in low paying jobs. The families who have been forcibly
relocated also usually move without being able to bring all their belongings,
adding to their problems of resettlement. Villagers sometimes move to villages
and towns where they have relatives, but their relatives are often not able to
provide the extra support needed, as they themselves are suffering. In addition,
these IDPs living in areas under SPDC control are subject to the same abuses as
the other villagers around them. These include the demands for forced labor,
fees, and restrictions that are commonplace across Burma. Yet because the abuses
committed are sometimes less then in areas under the four-cuts program,
many villagers choose to face the risk of moving to areas under full SPDC
control.

Villagers who have been forced to flee their homes and
villages for any of the above mentioned reasons, are sometimes able to seek
shelter in areas controlled by armed opposition groups, where they feel they
have some protection from SPDC abuses. Several of the armed opposition groups
operate camps and resettlement sites in their areas of activity. However, in
these camps and sites, supplies and services are very limited, and often the
shelter and supplies offered are only temporary. Access to food, education and
health varies from site to site, as does the level of security. In some camps
and sites schools, health care and other services are provided for a limited
number of IDPs, and the area is safe from SPDC attack, yet in almost all such
places, there are no employment opportunities. Therefore, the IDPs have to live
off of whatever the opposition groups can provide for them.

4) Displacement into jungles, fields, and other remote,
usually "free fire"orblack areas of Burma

There are nearly 1 million people estimated to be hiding in
the border conflict areas of Burma, and this is the IDP group with the least
access to basic survival needs. These villagers have fled into hiding, despite
the risks, because of various factors. These IDPs include:

- Those who flee SPDC troops in advance of their arrival;

- Those who can no longer stand the abuses they suffer in
their villages;

- Those who were ordered to move from their village to a
relocation site or other place, and who chose not to do so; and

- Those who have fled from relocation sites due to unlivable
conditions.

These IDPs are regarded as enemies by the SPDC troops, as the
areas where most villagers hide are located in black or "free-fire"
zones. They are shot on sight, or else captured, tortured and then sometimes
killed whenever they are found. Their shelters, rice plantations and belongings
are looted or destroyed when discovered. Under the guise of ridding areas of
opposition forces, the SPDC has launched several "search and destroy"
operations, in which soldiers root out and destroy everything they see in the
area including people. The troops often plant landmines on paths that they
suspect the IDP villagers use, and they practice a "scorched earth" policy of
looting, destroying and burning any signs of habitation or food supply. Troops
have even been known to cut down fruit trees growing naturally in the forest in
these operations in an attempt to make it impossible for anyone to survive in
the forests or jungles.

Villagers often hide in areas near their old villages and
risk attempting to work and harvest their crops in secret. This work is
extremely dangerous, and if crops are discovered by soldiers, they are burned or
destroyed. If the villagers are unsuccessful in harvesting rice, they forage for
other sources of food in the forests. Villagers in hiding, for the most part,
are unable to travel outside of their area of hiding to purchase other
necessities, and must make do with what they can find around them.

Health is a major concern for people in hiding. Life in the
tropics without shelter or adequate food leads to high sickness and mortality
rates from malnutrition, diarrhea, malaria, minor injuries and other easily
preventable illnesses. With a complete absence of health care facilities, people
mainly rely on herbs and traditional medicine. Although there are some
healthcare teams which seek to reach IDPs, the medicine and care they are able
to provide is insufficient for the numbers of IDPs in hiding across many border
areas.

IDPs hiding in the jungle are sometimes able to operate
temporary makeshift schools with volunteer teachers. These schools lack any
supplies, and are forced to shift from place to place depending on SPDC
activity. With the increase in SPDC activity, in recent years, and the common
occurrence of "search and destroy" operations, the number of these schools has
been greatly reduced.

13.3 Situation in Arakan State

Throughout 2002 the Muslim Rohingya population continued to
be subject to large scale internal displacement as they have been over the last
decade. Forced relocation has not been uncommon. Most relocation is connected to
military efforts to install military camps, to build administrative or religious
infrastructure, to move the Muslim Rohingya population to the north of the state
and to settle Buddhist people throughout the state in "model villages." Small
minorities of Arakan (notably the Mro) have also been relocated from their
mountainous and remote homelands to the plains.

Within Arakan State there is significant displacement due to
the government’s continuing discrimination and repression of the Rohingya Muslim
minority. The SPDC’s abuses against Rohingya Muslims, including denial of
citizenship, forced labour, and arbitrary confiscation of property, continue to
prompt new refugee flows and limit the reintegration of those who have returned
from refugee camps in Bangladesh. (For more information about discrimination and
displacement of Rohingya Muslims see chapters on Freedom of Belief and Religion,
and Situation of Refugees).

Muslim villages outside the far north are becoming rare. Most
of the Rohingyas who lived in the Kyauktaw, Mrauk-U or Minbya districts have
been forcibly displaced to the north over the past few years. These forced
relocations, which go hand in hand with serious human rights violations, have
been denounced by the UN Special Rapporteur on Burma, notably in February 1993
and January 1995. According to villagers still living in Rathidaung, out of the
53 Muslim villages existing in the district before 1995, only two remained in
1999. The construction of model villages for Buddhist settlers in the north of
the state also entails the forced relocations of Muslims who are moved to less
fertile lands, usually without adequate time to prepare or any compensation.

SPDC Plans to Establish More Settlers’ Villages in North
Arakan

On 16 November 2001 it was reported that the SPDC is
preparing to establish more settlers’ villages in the Muslim majority border
areas of north Arakan during the 2001-02 dry season. Instructions have already
been sent to local authorities to make the necessary arrangements for this. So
far, 33 settlers’ colonies, dubbed ‘model villages,’ have been established in
Maungdaw and Buthidaung townships on lands confiscated from Muslims. The new
settlers are ethnic Burmans, Rakhines and some members of hill tribes from
Arakan Hill Tracts in eastern Burma. They have all been provided with readymade
houses, farmlands, bullocks and carts, free rations for more than one year and
free labour from Muslim forced labourers.

Although the above settlements are established in the border
areas they are not under the control of the Na Sa Ka (border security force)
like Muslim villages. Instead they are controlled by the Headquarters of
Military Intelligence under the Western military command and Township Peace and
Development Council in Buthidaung. These new settlers have been responsible for
various crimes against Muslim villagers including picking fights and stealing
livestock. (Source: Arakan News Agency)

Forced Relocation in Arakan State - partial list of incidents
2002

SPDC Army Forces Carpenters to Build Houses for Burman
Settlers

On 7 March 2002, a large number of carpenters from Maungdaw
and Buthidaung Township areas have been forced by the SPDC Army to construct
houses for Burman Settlers. According to a Construction Department engineer, the
SPDC is constructing houses in about one dozen "Model (Sanpya) Villages"
in Buthidaung and Maungdaw townships. Seventy Burmese families consisting
of 296 people total, from central Burma will be relocated in the new houses
built in the "Model Villages" of Pe-yung, Tharay-kung-baung, Mora-waddy,
Udaung-kye-rwa, Aung-tha-bray and Naing-ra-gaing, in Maungdaw township.
The SPDC has ordered the local carpenters to complete the houses before 27March, the Burmese Army (Tatmadaw) Day.

It was learnt from some of the residents of the ‘model’
(otherwise known as SPDC) villages, that since February 3 2002 two families who
had been forcibly relocated from Rangoon to Aungthabray ‘SPDC’ village, fled to
unknown destinations. These relocated villagers took their belongings with them
and left behind a bullock-cart and two acres of paddy land.

According to the Contruction department engineer and sources
in the Maungdaw township administration (Mawata) the new houses being built in
the dozen model "SPDC" villages will house people relocated from central Burma.
People being relocated to Maungdaw include the homeless, lepers and people with
HIV/AIDS. The carpenters building these houses are paid below market wages by
the SPDC. (Source: Narinjara)

Land Confiscated for Model Villages

Throughout April 2002 the SPDC have been confiscating
privately owned land in the border townships of Maungdaw, Rathedaung and
Buthidaung . On 1 April, Mayaka Township Peace and Development Council Chairman
of Maungdaw, Captain Hla Paw and his group met with U Thein Tun, the leader of
Payrung model village and took him to the east of the village. There they
surveyed 135 acres of hilly area owned by neighbouring villagers. Afterwards the
authorities confiscated the land with plans to distribute it among the residents
of Payrung model village.

The confiscated land will be distributed after the
traditional Thaung-gran New Year festival that ends on 17th
April by casting lots among the mostly Burman residents of the model village.
There are now more than thirty such model villages in three townships which are
occupied mostly by settlers brought in from central Burma. The residents of
these villages are reportedly former hardcore criminals, HIV patients, drug
addicts, and retired military personnel. Residents are concerned that the
establishment of Na-a-fa model villages in the area will increase crime rates
and the spread of HIV to the local population. (Source: Narinjara)

NaSaKa Forcibly Relocates Villagers

Between 7-16 June, the NaSaKa troops forced 39 families from
Zedibraung village, Laungdung village tract, Maungdaw Township to relocate to
Chaung-they-braung (Sin-the-byin) village, in the northern part of Maungdaw.
This forced relocation left the villagers landless and homeless. Though the
monsoons were in full swing they were left with no land to cultivate. Due to the
torrential rains, the villagers faced difficulty in building houses in the area
where they were forced to resettle. This area is located in an inaccessible part
of the township where there are practically no road links, and materials like
bamboo, timber and thatch for building houses are not available in the nearby
hills.

The Nasaka border security forces evacuated the villagers
following the November murder of a prostitute by four Nasaka members in a camp
close to the village. The murderers decamped with the arms and ammunition. The
NaSaKa have alleged that the murderers came from the village, and carried out an
‘investigation’ into the incident which involved the detention and torture of
many villagers including women and teenagers. The NaSaKa have accused the
villagers of being accomplices to the murder, and the villagers believe that
they were relocated as punishment for this. (Source: Irrawaddy)

Rohingyas Continue to Flee to Bangladesh to Escape Forced
Labor and Starvation

On 7 October 2002 Narinjara reported that increasing numbers
of Rohingyas had entered Bangladesh after fleeing starvation and forced labor in
Burma. In Area # 8, Maungdaw Township, controlled by Myin Hlwett Nasaka (Border
Security Force) alone, at least 16 Muslim Rohingyas have left for Bangladesh in
recent weeks to escape conscription for forced labour and widespread starvation
caused by rising rice prices.

In Bangladesh, the new arrivals are not recognized as
refugees, and are usually unwelcome by locals as they are viewed as a ‘menace.’
While it is difficult to estimate the total number of Rohingyas who have crossed
into Bangladesh in recent months, many journalists in Cox’s Bazaar estimate the
number to be between 4 and 5 thousand.

On 5 November 2002 a fresh wave of Muslims from Burma
including Rohingya Muslims, reportedly crossed into south-eastern districts of
Bangladesh through Burma’s western border.The influx has caused wide concern
among the local administration. At the end of November an estimated five
thousand illegal Rohingyas had crossed the Naaf River and taken shelter in Cox’s
Bazaar, according to a news item in the Independent ( 26 Nov) from Dhaka. The
Rohingyas arrived fleeing increasing demands for forced labour by the Burmese
junta officials. Sabib Ali (not real name) a resident of Maungdaw Township who
is now living in Cox’s Bazaar, reported that there is an undisclosed famine-like
situation prevailing in the area where the majority of Rohingya Muslims live.
These harships are a result of wide-spread conscription for forced labour,
rising costs of basic commodities, and high levels of unemployment. This man
estimated that there were approximately 9,000 to 10,000 illegal Rohingyas
currently lving in Cox’s Bazaar.

Sabib Ali also reported on further persecution that drives
Rohingyas out of Burma: "The Burmese junta imposed travel restrictions on the
movements of the Muslim Rohingyas also make our life miserable as we cannot even
move from one village to another without the permission of the local junta
officials. That does not come without a large bribe. Our wedding also needs
permission from the junta to take place. In the coming Eid-ul-fitr, the greatest
of Muslim festivals, we will have difficult times observing it as most of the
Muslim population is hard-up due to all the restrictions." (Source: Narinjara)

Muslims Forced to Give Rice for Burmese Settlers.

On 18 November 2002Muslim villagers living in
Maungdaw Township near the border with Bangladesh have been forced to give rice
to Burmese settlers who have been relocated in the area by the SPDC. Each of the
Muslim families in the villages around Padummala village, situated 10 miles
south of Maungdaw Town, have been ordered by the SPDC officials to give fifteen
baskets (about 180 kilo) of rice during the current harvest.

Reportedly, many of the Burman settlers who were brought to
the area in 1995-96 were previously homeless. One local village elder reports:
"Many of them are single persons either jobless or of doubtful livelihood…many
are believed to have had connections with crime in Burma proper."

After being brought to the Maugdaw by the SPDC, each of the
settlers was given three acres of paddy land, a buffalo cart, a pair of
bullocks, and a house with a corrugated iron sheet roof. As most of the settlers
were unable to earn a livelihood, many were soon forced to sell the corrugated
iron sheets to buy food. To date many of those resettled have surreptitiously
left for their previous homes in central Burma. The remaining settlers continue
to be a heavy burden for the native Muslim and Buddhist villagers living nearby,
since these villagers have to do all the agricultural work for them in addition
to giving them rice demanded by SPDC officials. (Source: Narinjara)

13.4 Situation in Karenni State

Brief Summery of the Situation of Internally Displaced
Persons in Karenni State

Currently in Karenni State there are three types of
displacement: conflict-induced; development-induced; and displacement arising as
a result of resource scarcity. Conflict exists in these areas as a result of the
Karenni National Progressive Party’s (KNPP) efforts to cecede from Burma. These
efforts have been strongly resisted by the military government, with
displacement used as a tool since the 1960s to secure areas from rebel forces.
This displacement has included the confiscation of land and natural resources by
the military, greatly impoverishing local communities.

The successive military regimes of Burma have three times
carried out forced relocation programs in Karenni State. First under the BSPP,
particularly in No. (2) District of Karenni State, when an estimated 50 villages
were destroyed and burnt down and tens of thousands of villagers in the area
became homeless. Second, under the SLORC, who forcibly relocated many villages
in No. (3) District of Karenni State, and about 500 of the villagers in the area
died from diseases such as malaria and diarrhea. Then in 1996, the military
government again carried out its forced relocation program across the Karenni
area. A forced relocation order with the deadline of July 7, was first given to
villagers living between the Salween and Pon rivers, the two major rivers in
Karenni State. According to the order, the villagers had to leave their villages
in seven days and go to forced relocation sites designated by SPDC. The
villagers were warned that seven days after the order, the area would be
declared a free-fire zone, and anyone found in the villages or in the free-fire
zone would be considered a rebel and shot dead on sight. In the year 2000, the
SPDC allowed many Karenni people who had been living in forced relocation sites
since 1996 to go back to their own villages. The villagers however, were ordered
to report to the nearest SPDC outposts at least once a week. Currently, they are
not allowed to stay over night at their farms, and are required to possess
passes, which cost 20 kyat in order to travel to their farms during the day.
Villagers are prohibited from carrying military uniforms or traditional guns
used for hunting, and from trading in medicine or batteries, and the purchasing
and selling of rice is restricted. Villagers are allowed to travel from village
to village only twice a week- on Tuesday and Thursday. When they travel
they are checked for their National ID cards, and are required to pay 20 kyat at
every checkpoint.

Partial Return of IDPs from Southern Shan State

In 1996 people from Karenni State fled into Southern Shan
State’s SNPLO area and joined a population of Karenni that had moved there as
IDPs twenty years ago. When they arrived in Shan State, they started wearing
Pa-O clothing rather than their own. They did this because they worried that if
the SPDC troops saw them wearing Karenni clothes, they would be victimized. The
people there farm rice and opium. Those who arrived after 1996 are waiting for
the political situation to improve before returning. In the summer of 2002,
several villages returned to Karenni State although there is still no security,
health care or education. Before returning, they informed the SPDC authorities
based in their old township. The SPDC authorities replied that they could return
as long as there is no fighting around their village and they are not allowed to
contact the KNPP. They threatened that if any fighting took place, they would
come back and burn down the village. (Source: Burma Issues)

Villagers Displaced by Government Infrastructure Projects

"Recent data indicate that while villagers have been
displaced by fighting, it is also government-initiated development schemes,
aimed at separating people from non-state groups by forcing them into relocation
sites, that has resulted in most displacements since 1960s. These schemes were
responsible for the wide-scale displacement of about 25,206 people in 1996
alone. Of these, 11,669 are known to have moved to relocation sites, 4,400 were
registered in refugee camps and a further 9,137 unaccounted for. Since 1998,
many IDPs have moved out of relocation sites back to their villages (some
voluntarily, while others have been ordered back) or to refugee camps in
Thailand. (BERG September 2000)

"Another project that caused an unknown number of
displacements was the rail link between Loikaw and Aung Ban on the border with
Shan state. Work on the railway, which is 40 kilometres long, started in 1991
and was completed in 1994. During this time, 31 acres of farmland plus 9 acres
of land in Loikaw city were requisitioned to make way for the line [...] A
further 24 households were displaced in Loikaw to make way for additional but
unspecified transport infrastructure projects. In each case no compensation was
made. In addition to the displacements which came about directly as a result of
the railway, the building of the embankments disrupted (in some cases blocked)
irrigation systems and supplies of water to local farms. This then resulted in a
further voluntary displacement, the extent of which is not known." (BERG May
2000)

"Land ownership is extremely fragmented and a significant
proportion of the population is landless in Karenni State. There are large
numbers of displaced connected to economic interests in the area. With an
economy based on access to teak resources - and of equal importance,
hydro-electric power and mining concessions - the government has in some cases
taken steps to pacify areas, quelling so-called ‘insurgency’ problems before
undertaking investment in the areas. Much of this displacement is carried out in
military style outside any civil or legal framework. Moreover, the deterioration
of the formal economy has fostered the growth of an extra-legal state economy,
focused on the extraction of natural resources that all groups, including the
state, rely on. In the absence of lasting and substantive peace, the
displacement of civilians is likely to continue. The current cease-fire
agreements in the state appear to be ad hoc
economic deals rather than a process aimed at political resolution and peaceful
reintegration. The cease-fires in fact have allowed armed groups to legitimise
their the extra-legal state economy and added to further factionalism in the
competition for increasingly scarce resources." (BERG September 2000)

Situation in Relocation Sites

Relocation sites have been scattered throughout the state at
Shadaw, Ywathit, Mawchi, Pah Saung, Baw La Keh, Kay Lia, Mar Kraw She, Tee Po
Kloh and Nwa La Bo. As more villages were relocated, more sites such as Daw Dta
Hay were created. All were under complete control of the Army, usually located
adjacent to new or existing Army bases. Although living in the jungle was
fraught with problems associated with the danger of the patrols and finding food
to eat, some people still tried to remain there, but many gave in to the order
and moved to the relocation sites. Conditions at the relocation sites were
extremely basic, with the lack of proper shelters, pure drinking water, and
little food or medicine contributing to many deaths from starvation and illness.
At each of the large sites, there is evidence of an intention to provide health
care to IDPs, either at a health facility inside the site or at a nearby health
centre. In practice, however, given the general constraints to the public health
system, services were not utilised well. With facilities both under-equipped and
under-supplied, health care providers were often left to do the best they could.
In some of the other sites, such as Htee Poh Kloh and Mar Kraw Shay, refugees
said there were no health facilities at all.

Approximately, 1000 villagers in No. (1) District alone died
in both forced relocation sites and hideouts. International relief organizations
have no access to the sites. Leaders from a couple of local churches tried to
provide food and other needed materials for the villagers in the hideouts but
they were not allowed to do so. The villagers were not allowed to go out of the
sites to farm. Recently, villagers from some sites have been allowed to farm
outside the sites, but they must return at the end of the day. The villagers
also face forced labor and portering. A certain number of villagers have to go
to the nearest strongholds of the SPDC everyday where they are forced to offer
free labor such as digging trenches, making fences, fetching water and
collecting firewood. Women and children are also made to do forced labor.

Perimeters of the relocation sites are reportedly largely
left unguarded and the fences that the villagers are often forced to build are
primarily around the army camps and not the actual relocation sites. Troops are
lax in securing the camp perimeters realizing that villagers have no choice but
to forage for food outside the camps. This is often used by the villagers as a
chance to flee the relocation site and go into hiding in the jungle, usually
near their old villages. The continual flight of residents has been ongoing
since the relocation sites were first established, and many villagers report
that a large number of people have already left the relocation sites in search
of food and that the current populations of the relocation sites are much less
than what they were initially. (NCGUB, KNAHR)

Situation of IDPs in Hiding

A large number of villagers who were ordered to leave their
villages in 1996 remain displaced outside relocation sites. In the first few
months following the order to relocate, there were at least 13,537 IDPs living
in hiding. These villagers find their lives are in great danger as they are
constantly being hunted by SPDC troops. While on the run and in hiding the
villagers suffer from many kinds of diseases such as malaria, diarrhea and skin
infections. Many villagers have died from treatable diseases. Villagers fall ill
frequently due to lack of proper shelter. They are all the time on the move,
especially when SPDC troops approach their hideouts. While on the move,
villagers have to travel in all kinds of weather, sleep on the ground, eat what
they find in the jungle and drink impure water. Many IDPs in hiding have also
died from starvation, as most are not able to farm. These IDPs also have no
access to education. (CSW November 2000)

Forced Relocation in Karenni State - partial list of
incidents 2002

On 4 and 5 May, 2002, Burmese Township authorities from
Mawchi and Pasaung gave a verbal order to the villages in Lopwakho District, to
move the Mawchi and Pasaung relocation sites. This was the second time they had
been ordered to relocate by May 27. People living in these villages had been
moved to the relocation sites in 1996 and returned to their native villages at
the beginning of 2000. After having re-settled in their native villages, they
were forced to work on the old Mawchi-Taungoo road repair project by the Mawchi
military commander in 2001 and were told to complete it at the end of the year.
However, the road repair project could not be finished according to schedule,
due to lack of manpower.

Because of their previous painful experiences in relocation
sites, the people decided not to move to the sites, which are also known as
concentration camps. Instead, some traveled to Thailand and some people traveled
to the Karen area bordering Thailand. Local Thai authorities denied shelter to
those people who crossed into Thailand and tried to push them back across the
border into Burma. Currently these people are living a precarious existence
without safety or adequate provisions. (Source: KNAHR)

On 15 June 2002, the Burmese commander from LIB No. 302 at
Shadaw base ordered villagers from Tin Loi, Shadaw Township, who had just
recently re-settled there to move their village once again. The Burmese
commander did not say where the villagers were to go. The village chiefs
approached the Shadaw military commander the next day requesting that he
re-considered his order and also explained their situation. However, their
appeal was rejected and they were told that if they failed to move within 3
days, the troops would raid and burn the village down. (Source: KNAHR)

13.5 Situation in Mon State

While not on the same scale as in neighbouring Karen State,
forced reloctions continued to occur in Mon State throughout 2002. The incidence
of forced relocation decreased after 1995 when the New Mon State Party ( NMSP)
made a cease-fire agreement with the SLORC. However, the continuation of Mon
resistance under the MRA (Mon Revolutionary Army) alongside continuing
operations in the area by the (Karen National Liberation Army) KNLA has ensured
that much of Mon state remained a war zone throughout 2002.

In October of that year in Bangkok the umbrella organization
of the Mon asked the UN human rights envoy to allow the International Committee
of Red Cross access into the areas of displaced persons. Sunthorn Sripanngern,
General Secretary of the Mon Unity League (MUL), asked for ICRC access into the
Mon area of internally displaced people at a meeting with the UN human rights
special envoy, Mr. Paulo Sergio Pinheiro. According to an MUL spokesperson, the
meeting was organized by Mr Nicholas Howen, UNHCR Regional Representative for
Asia-Pacific, and attended by NGOs working on Burma and the Head of the ICRC
Regional Delegation for East Asia, Mr Jean-Marc Bornet. Several armed groups
including SPDC troops are active in the so-called cease-fire zone of the Mon
making the situation there arguably worse than before the cease-fire deal with
the SPDC in 1995. (Source: Kao Wao, November, 1, 2002)

In early 1990s "…when the NMSP had already lost much of its
former territory - forced labor, forced relocations, arbitrary taxation, and the
extrajudicial execution of villagers suspected of assisting Mon soldiers were
the main causes of flight. The SLORC set about developing the Mon state and
Tenasserim division peninsular, embarking on a massive program of road and
railroad construction and clearing economically important areas of people who
might support the Mon and Karen ethnic armies. The single most common reason for
flight over the next five years was the construction of the railroad between Ye
and Tavoy (a distance of 160 kilometers). In late 1993 the SLORC started
rounding up villagers in Mon state to provide labor to build the railroad, and
as of May 1998 the use of forced labor on this project was continuing. Over this
period of time, thousands of Mon, Karen, and Tavoyan villagers were forced to
work at the site for up to two weeks per month, sometimes more. As in other
forced labor projects, the villagers were forced to find their own
transportation to the site, take with them their own tools and food for the
duration of their stay, and work without pay until their allotted section of
work was complete. Villages nearest the site were targeted first, but as the
project continued, people from further afield were used. The work was overseen
by Tatmadaw soldiers, who often beat people considered not to be working hard
enough, and there were few safety precautions, so that laborers sometimes died
in accidents and landslides. After months of such work, during which time they
were no longer able to tend their fields, villagers lost the ability to sustain
themselves and had no option but to flee to Thailand....

The other major development project that affected the Mon was
the gas pipeline that was to be built to carry natural gas from the Gulf of
Martaban across Burma and into Thailand. The original route was to have taken
the pipeline to Three Pagodas Pass, though a shorter land route coming out
further south at Nat Ei Daung was finally agreed upon. Nevertheless, in
preparation for the pipeline, which would be vulnerable to attack by ethnic
minority forces, Mon and Karen villages were forced to relocate, and in 1995,
the SLORC created a new army command position, the Tenasserim Coastal Military
Command, whose headquarters were in Tavoy. The increase in Tatmadaw soldiers in
the area led to an immediate increase in the forced recruitment of civilians as
porters and as laborers to build new army barracks in the region, and this
contributed to refugee outflows from 1994 onwards." (Source: HRW: "The Ethnic
Minorities" & "The Mon," September 1998 )

In most cases, whenever forced relocation happens in rural
area in Mon State, the commanders who order the villagers to leave their homes
do not give the villagers a place they need to move to. Instead they tell the
villagers that they can resettle anywhere, as long as it is not in the area of
their former village. Some villages are accused of being rebel bases and
villagers are suspected of being rebel-supporters. These villagers suffer more
than other villagers from torture and killing by the SPDC, and those villagers
who are afraid of being killed and tortured try to leave the village.

Sometimes after villagers have been displaced they try to
return to their original villages despite the dangers, to harvest cash crops
such as betel-nut, and coconut, or to try and cultivate paddy in the fields.
When the battalion that ordered them to leave their village is replaced with a
new battalion, IDPS are in some cases able to return to their homes, and if the
new battalions are less brutal than the previous ones, they can stay longer in
their villages. When more brutal battalions come, they flee again. Population
displacement is a main problem in southern Burma especially in Karen State, in
some part of Mon State and most parts of Tenasserim Division. (Source: HURFOM)

Forced Relocation in Mon State - partial list of incidents
2002

Villagers Flee after SPDC Restrictions on Movement

At the end of January 2002, the commander of LIB No. 550, in
retaliation for an

attack made by the MRA, prohibited 200 villagers from
traveling to work on their paddy farms or fruit plantations which were outside
of the village. The SPDC commander accused all the villagers of being rebel
supporters and said that if they did not follow his orders to stay only inside
village, he would burn down the whole village.

After this order, many people fled from the village because
they were afraid of being killed or tortured. After the SPDC troops left on 30
January, about 30 families with a total of 150 villagers fled to Halockhani Mon
refugee resettlement site, which is about 10 Kilometers from their village. The
remaining villagers fled to other areas and are currently living as IDPs.
(Source: HURFOM)

SPDC Confiscate Land for Artillery Regiment

On 5 November 2002, SPDC Southeast Command confiscated about
200 acres of land from 49 Mon farmers, in order tobuild an artillery
regiment in the southern part of Mudon Township. Most of the land had been used
to grow rubber trees, which the farmers had planted several years ago and were
waiting to harvest. The owners of the land were Mon villagers from Set-thawe,
Do-ma, Kalort-tort and Ah-bit villages. The army did not pay any compensation
cost to those who lost their land.

At the same time, some authorities from the forestry
department lied to the farmers saying that if the farmers paid them a bribe they
wouldn’t lose their land. Since 2000,the Burmese Army has confiscated many
thousands of acres of land from Mon farmers in Ye Township. (Source: HURFOM)

13.6 Situation in Sagaing Division

"...In Sagaing Division, the designated administrative
boundaries of the division conceal the ethnic diversity within its borders and
the internal displacement which has occurred. Many Naga people, estimated to be
around 100,000 strong in total, populate the four northern townships of the
division, near the town of Khamti and the Patkai mountain range […]. Fighting
for an independent Nagaland in both India and Burma, and facing increased
internal divisions, the Naga have suffered significant conflict-related
displacement.....It is estimated that up to 1,300 villagers have been displaced
….The construction of the Kalay-Gangaw railway line in Sagaing Division
illustrates clearly that the problems of forced displacement are not only
confined to the war-affected zones. The line crosses mostly flat farmland and
paddy fields; these were destroyed without any compensation being paid by the
national government." (BERG, September 2000)

Forced Relocation in Tamu Town

On 14 September 2002 Mizzima reported that U Maung Maung
Myint, Chairman of the district SPDC division, ordered residents of 38 houses in
Block No. 5, Tamu town to vacate their houses before October 2002. The Tamu
residents were relocated to Natmyin village to make room for a government
project scheduled to start on 15 June. The authorities will disburse no
compensation or reimbursement for the expenses incurred during relocation. U
Maung Maung Myint further warned local residents that "whoever apprises the BBC
or the RFA of the forced relocation plan will be punished severely," reported a
local resident. The houses slated for relocation measure 60 inches in length and
80inches in width. One of those facing forced relocation said that he would defy
the order and stay at his place. (Source: Mizzima)

13.7 Situation in Shan State

The SPDC has engineered mass forced relocation in Shan state
since 1996. This relocation has occured on a scale so massive that many
observers conclude that it is intented to permanently change the ethnic
composition of Shan state. In 2002 these campaigns continued, often in the name
of crop subsitution and drug eradication programs. In 1996 the SLORC delineated
a huge area of Central Shan State, and ordered the forced relocation and
destruction of every village in the region. The villagers were forced to move
into sites more directly under military control. By 1998, over 1,400 villages in
12 townships had been forcibly relocated and destroyed, displacing a population
of at least 300,000 people. (Source: Charting the Exodus from Shan State:
Patterns of Shan Refugee flow into Northern Chiang Mai Province of Thailand
1997-2002, SHRF May, 2003)

Indicative of the SPDC’s widespread campaign to suppress and
‘Burmanize’ Shan people was Khin Nyunt’s January 2002 response to the ILO’s
investigation into the alleged killing of villagers in Kengtung who had
complained about forced labor. In his communication to the ILO, Khin Nyunt
casually stated that "there were only a few villages in the area" (of Kaeng
Tawng), when in fact these villages are relocation sites to which 50-60 formerly
thriving villages were forced to move in 1996. Khin Nyunt also denied the
existence of several victims because their villages "did not exist" (they had
been relocated). Khin Nyunt further corrected SHRF’s use of the Shan name of one
village, referring to it by a Burmese name. This village is one of the areas
where the regime is now relocating Burmans. In response to Khin Nyunt’s
statements, SHRF notes that: "the intent of the SPDC to Burmanize the region,
erase the Shan history and identity, and its own crimes in the process, is thus
frighteningly apparent." (Source: "SHRF Monthly Report", March, 2002, Shan Human
Rights Foundation)

In 1999 SHRF noted, "There are various patterns of
displacement for the Shan villagers who have been forcibly relocated from their
homes. There are basically four alternatives, which are detailed below. However,
many of the displaced have not chosen a single alternative, but have chosen more
than one or, in some cases, even tried all four, in different orders. Thus,
there are countless variations on the patterns of displacement.

Moving to the Relocation Sites

The term "relocation sites" refers to the sites designated by
SPDC troops to which the relocated villagers were forced to move. These were
usually areas of bare land near towns, main roads and army bases where nothing
at all was provided for them by the local authorities.

Going into Hiding

One option for the villagers ordered to move was simply to go
into hiding in the jungles near their villages, and then lead a precarious
existence dodging Burma Army patrols while seeking to continue cultivating their
crops.

Moving to Towns or Other Areas of Shan State (Outside of
Relocation Sites)

Some forcibly relocated villagers moved straight to towns.
The main factor influencing whether people did this was either money, which
meant that they could afford to purchase land or housing there, or else having
relatives in towns with whom they could stay, and perhaps find work. Other
people moved to villages on the periphery of the area of forced relocation,
which they felt would be safe from relocation because they were under the
control of the ceasefire organisations such as the Shan State Army, the Shan
State National Army, the Shan Nationalities People’s Liberation Organisation or
the Pa-O National Army.

Moving to Thailand

There has long been a pattern of migration of Shans to
Thailand to find work, as the historical, ethnic and linguistic connections are
very strong. An estimated 150,000 people from Shan state have moved to Thailand
since 1996. The overwhelming majority of them come Central Shan state which has
borne the brunt of the military’s relocation program. The majority of Shan
migrants to Thailand are refugees and their participation in the thai economy is
a direct refusal of the Thai government’s refusal to recognize their status as
refugees and allow them to establish refugee camps. (Source: SHRF 2003)

The Cause of Migration

Four Shan familes arrived on the Thai border in March/April
2002 from a village in Murg Nai township. These people reported that continuing
forced relocation campaigns by SPDC troops have had a severe impact on villages
in remote areas. People living close to towns or army garrisons were not
subjected to forced relocation, but suffered from other hardships. The
conditions for people allowed to remain in their villages are not much better
than conditions for those who had been relocated. Although these peoples’ homes
are intact, their farmlands have been confiscated for the SPDC troops. In
addition, these people spend much of their time carrying out forced labor either
for the construction of army camps or to tend the army’s fields. Due to
inflation of the Burmese currency, the price of household goods has more than
doubled, and with no land for cultivation and not much free time to work, local
residents live in a state close to starvation. Even if these villagers are able
to find time to work, the average daily wage of 400 kyats (about 20 baht), is
insufficient to feed their families. When villagers are allowed to farm lands
that have been confiscated from them, they are forced to sell 8 out of every 9
baskets of rice to the army at below market price. The Burmese authorities paid
them 1,000-2,000 kyats per basket, while the price is 5,000-6,000 kyats at
current market rate. Sometimes the authorities do not pay anything for the rice
that they ‘buy.’ As conditions continue to deteriorate daily, more people are
choosing to try and flee to the border. (Source: Freedom, March & April 2002)

Year Township Number of people resettled

1999-2000Monghsat55,000

2000-2001Mongton35,000

2001 (rainy season)Tachilek15,000

TOTAL 105,000

(Source: SHAN November 2001)

Wa Relocation

In April 2002, the Lahu National Development Organization (LNDO)
published a report titled "Unsettling Moves: The Wa forced resettlement program
in Eastern Shan State." It describes the mass relocation of Wa people from the
Wa Substate which borders China, to the Thai-Burma border in Shan state. The
report states that:

"…..since the end of 1999, over one quarter of the entire Wa
population have been forcibly resettled from their homes near the China border
to southern Shan State. Authorized by the Burmese military junta, the United Wa
State Party (UWSP) has sent approximately 1 26,000 men, women and children by
truck and on foot over 400 kilometres south to the Thai-Burma border.

Both the UWSP and the junta, the State Peace and Development
Council (SPDC), have officially stated that the mass Wa resettlement program is
aimed to eradicate opium production by enabling villagers to grow alternative
crops in the more fertile lands of southern Shan State. However, evidence in
this report shows that the resettled villagers are planting new opium fields,
with the support of SPDC and UWSP officials.

While it is clear that this resettlement program has little
to do with drug eradication, the real motives have yet to be confirmed. This
report speculates that the UWSP has carried out the program to gain territory
and economic advantages from border trade into Thailand and Laos. It is
speculated that the SPDC are carrying out their usual divide-and-rule strategy:
pitting the UWSP against the Shan resistance in southern Shan State, and using
the UWSP as a proxy army against neighbouring countries; not to mention dividing
the Wa themselves. Wa sources also state that financial benefits for individual
SPDC leaders have facilitated the move.

Whatever the rationale for the resettlement, this report
clearly documents the forced nature of the program and the abuses inflicted not
only on those resettled but also on the villagers in the south who lost their
lands to the new arrivals. The resettled Wa came from six townships in the
northern Wa area, as well as inside China’s Yunnan province. Some were given no
warning whatsoever before the move, and all were forced to abandon most of their
possessions. Most were herded into trucks to travel south, but many were forced
to walk through mountains, taking over two months. Some died en route.

On arrival in the south, the villagers were settled mainly
around existing villages in the townships of Mong Hsat, Mong Ton and Tachilek,
lying opposite Thailand’s Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai provinces. Upon arrival, the
villagers were given rice by the UWSP but, unused to the new surroundings, many
fell ill. It is estimated that over 4,000 people died, of malaria and other
diseases, during the year 2000 alone.

The lives of the original inhabitants of these areas, mainly
Shan, Lahu and Akha, have been gravely disrupted. Their lands and property have
been seized by the newcomers, and they have had to face abuses committed by both
SPDC and UWSP troops. This report estimates that the number of original
inhabitants affected by the resettlement program is approximately 48,000. Of
these, it is estimated that at least 4,500 have fled to other areas of Shan
State, while another 4,000 have fled to Thailand. These Shan, Lahu and Akha
villagers have no access to refugee camps where they can access protection and
humanitarian assistance." (Source: LNDO 2003)

Forced Relocation in Shan State - partial list of incidents
2002

Wa Development Project

The remaining villagers in a Thai crop replacement project
site at Yawng-kha in Monghsat township across from Chiangrai were ordered to
vacate the area.

"Soon after the Thais (in the survey team) left on 28
January, (2002) the Wa began erecting stakes attached with red cloth to mark the
outline of what we think is the project site," said one villager who fled to
Tachilek, opposite Maesai of Chiangrai province. "They also told us to sell our
places and leave because we wouldn’t be allowed to stay there anymore anyway."

The Yawng-kha area, known as Nayao to native villagers, used
to have more than 240 households of Shans, Akha and Palaungs, according to a
local Shan relief agency but only about 60 were left. The vacated land was
filled up by thousands of Wa newcomers, it said. The drive for a Thai-initiated
crop replacement project began in earnest soon after Gen Khin Nyunt’s landmark
visit in September. Meanwhile, troop movements have been reported from Tachilek
to the Yawng-kha area where hundreds of Burmese-Wa forces face the Kengtung
Front Force of the Shan State Army at Loi Kawwan. Chiangrai’s local FM radio has
also been warning Thai citizens against crossing the border at this time. The
battle of Loi Kawwan that was launched against the SSA on 5 February 2001
escalated into a Thai-Burmese border conflict when the nearby Pangnoon Thai
outpost was taken by the Burmese forces. (Source: S.H.A.N.)

Villagers Told to Return to Relocated Village in Kun-Hing.

In early 2002, villagers from Saai Khaao village in Saai
Khaao village tract, Kun-Hing township, (who had been forced to relocate to the
outskirts of Kun-Hing town in 1996-97 by the Burmese army troops), were told by
SPDC troops from Kun-Hing-based IB246 to return to Saai Khaao village. When the
villagers returned to Saai Khaao village they were forced to stay within
restricted areas provide the military with free labour.

Saai Khaao village was the site of one of the most gruesome
massacres of innocent villagers committed on 16 June 1997 by the Burmese army
troops. On that day, about 60 IDPs were killed at Saai Khaao village and Taad
Pha Ho waterfall.These villagers had been forced to move to a relocation site,
but then were given permission by SLORC troops to retrieve the rice they had
left at their original villages. However the villagers were stopped when they
were returning to the relocation site with 40-50 ox-cart-loads of rice and shot
dead in groups by SLORC troops. Their ox-carts were then burned and destroyed.

By 4 March 2002, about 68 familes, comprising a total of 345
people, had gone back to Saai Khaao village. Burmese military authorities in the
area set up an outpost camp at the village and issued an order requiring the
villagers to do the following things:

1. To grow teak trees on both sides of the main road
from Kun-Hing town up to Kaeng Tawng area in Murng-Nai township;

2. To build fences around the village, about 4
elbow-lengths in height;

3. Each household to grow 20 mango and 5 jackfruit
trees;

4. Each house to dig a ditch in front of the house, 3
elbow-lengths deep, 2 elbow-lengths wide and 10-15 arm-spans long;

5. Every household to take turns to cultivate the
5-acre mango orchard of the military;

6. No villagers to go beyond 2-3 miles from the village
to farm;

7. All villagers to stay in their respective
house-compounds between 6 pm to 6 am; anyone found outside their compounds
within that time would be shot on sight.

8. Each household to raise at least 2 pigs, of which 1
was for the military, and take all the responsibilities, including buying
and feeding them, etc., until they were big enough to be eaten;

9. Each household to raise 10 chickens, of which 5 were
for the military, and take all the responsibilities, including buying and
feeding them, etc., until they were big enough to be eaten;

10. Any one who refused to comply with this order would
be fined 5,000 Kyat and punished with 3 years in jail.

The villagers who have left Kun-Hing relocation site and
returned to their original village, Saai Khaao, are now facing even more
difficult conditions and are secretly, little by little, fleeing to other
places. While having to serve the military with forced labour, the villagers
continue to be subjected to arbitrary killing and rape. In February 2002, 3
villagers from Saai Khaao village, who were going to their farm were seized by a
passing SPDC military column and later raped and killed. (Source: SHRF)

Villagers Forced to Relocate for Second Time

On 14April 2002, an SPDC army brigade
commander ordered his troops to

search the houses and farm huts in every village in Naa Poy
village tract, Lai Kha township. After searching and confiscating the villagers’
property, the brigade commander then summoned all the village headmen and said,
"Who gave you the permission to return to your old villages? You must resettle
along the motor-road-side within 15 days after which all these villages will be
burned down". The villagers, who had just returned to their old villages before
the cultivation season, then had to move for the second time. (Source: Freedom,
May 2002)

Confiscation of Cultivated Land and Repeated Relocation of
Displaced Villagers in Nam-Zarng and Lai-Kha.

In June 2002, displaced villagers from Kho Lam village
relocation site in Nam-Zarng township who had earlier been permitted by local
SPDC troops to return to their original villages, were forced back to Kho Lam by
SPDC troops from different units. In addition, the villagers’ and farms were
confiscated and given to the Lahu people’s militia.

In March 2002, displaced villagers originally from Ton Hung
Haai Laai village tract in Nam-Zarng township and Naa Poi village tract in Lai-Kha
township (which had been forcibly relocated to Kho Lam in 1996-97 by the then
SLORC troops) were permitted by the present local SPDC troops to return to stay
and farm their lands at their original villages. Since then, many displaced
villagers had returned to cultivate their lands at their original villages.

The villagers had been staying and working at their original
villages for almost 2 months — many had already put up new fences around their
old compounds and prepared their lands for growing crops, and some had already
planted rice — when a column of SPDC troops from the adjacent Wan Zing village
tract in Kae-See township came to Naa Poi village tract area. The SPDC troops
brought with them some members of the Lahu people’s militia. When they saw the
villagers who had returned to Naa Poi village tract, the troops ordered them to
go back to Kho Lam relocation site in Nam-Zarng township, giving them 10 days to
move their belongings.

A different group of SPDC troops from Kho Lam also came to
Ton Hung Haai Laai village tract and ordered the villagers who had returned to
go back to Kho Lam relocation site. These troops accused the villagers of having
returned without permission and threatened that they would shoot at anyone found
in the area next time they came to the area.

The SPDC troops from Kae-See also told the villagers that
their farm lands had been given to members of the Lahu people’s militia because
they were helping in the work of the Burmese army, and if Lahu militia were
attacked by Shan soldiers after they had come to stay on the lands, the
villagers would be held responsible. The Shan villagers had no choice but to
return to Kho Lam relocation site, to face a life even harder and more destitute
then before. (Source: SHRF)

Shan Teak Houses for Burmese Resettlers

In September newly arrived Shan refugees in Thailand report
that a village in southern Shan State whose residents were relocated by the
Burmese military during the 1996 - 98 forced relocation campaign has recently
been opened for resettlement to arrivals from central Burma proper. "I couldn’t
bear to stay there and watch outlanders living in my home while my family had to
struggle each day just to survive", said a former native of Nayok Village,
Nawng-hee Tract, Kengtawng Township. (Kengtawng, formerly part of Mongnai
Township, was named a separate township last month, said migrants from the
area.) "So we decided to leave".

Nayok, comprising 47 households, used to be a thriving hamlet
and was known for its delicious loganberries. There are 22 houses, 5 two-storied
and 17 one-storied, built entirely of teakwood, according to its former
occupants, half of whom are already in Thailand."When the Kengtawng urbanization
project was announced two years ago, we went back to apply for permission to
return to our homes but were rejected," added another one. "The trouble with us
Shans is that most of us don’t have any official document to show we own the
place, because we were never given any since the day of Zaofahs (Shan ruling
princes)."

Rangoon’s massive eviction program had uprooted 99 villages,
consisting of 3,850 households in the area, according to Dispossessed: Forced
Relocation and Extrajudicial Killings in Shan State by Shan Human Rights
Foundation, April 1998.

Kengtawng had been slated for resettlement of 3,000 families
coming up from Burma proper, according to the sources. "So far about 500 have
already been resettled there," said one. It is also known for its teakwood
forests. Asia World, owned by Law Hsinghan, and Shan State South, owned by
Mahaja, are two of the firms that have been granted logging concessions in the
area by Rangoon.

"One piece of good news is that forced labor in Kengtawng has
lessened since the ILO row over last year’s killings of 7 villagers (who
complained to authorities of the existence of forced labor despite official
banning)," said one. "But we would be happier if we were given back our lands
and homes." (Source: SHAN, 22 September 2002)

Displaced Farmers Beaten, Their Land and Property Confiscated
and Driven Away in Murng-ton.

In October, 2 displaced farmers were arrested, beaten and
detained by SPDC troops from LIB519. The farmers were later forced to leave
their land and houses, which were also confiscated, at Wan Naa village about 1-2
miles from Murng-Ton town. These farmers were originally from Naa Khaa Awn
village,Ngaa Teng village tract, in Kaeng Kham area of Kun-Hing township, which
had been forcibly relocated in 1997 by the then SLORC (State Law and Order
Restoration Council) troops. The farmers did not go to the relocation site but
came to Thailand instead.

Zaai Aw, (m, 42) the head of the family, reports that after
working in Thailand for 3 years, the family members managed to save up some
money and return to Shan State where they bought a small plot of land,
consisting of a small house and a vegetable garden, at Wan Naa village near
Murng-Ton town in Murng-Ton township. After they had stayed at Wan Naa village
for over a year, SPDC troops from LIB519 came and arrested Zaai Aw’s son and
Zaai Aw’s younger brother and took them to the military camp.

The SPDC soldiers accused Ai Ta, aged 20, Zaai Aw’s son and
Zaai Laek, aged 35, Zaai Aw’s younger brother, of being members of the Shan
resistance and of having led Shan soldiers to shot at SPDC soldiers. The SPDC
soldiers severely beat the two men until their heads were fractured and
bleeding, and then locked them up in the camp. The next morning, Zaai Aw and the
village leaders went to the military camp and pleaded for the release of Ai Ta
and Zaai Laek. Zaai Aw and the village leaders assured the soldiers that the two
men did not have any connections with the Shan resistance.

The SPDC troops then told the village leaders that if these
people were originally from Kaeng Kham (in Kun-Hing township), they were bad
people and must be driven away, and their land would be taken by the military.
On 23 October 2002, the SPDC troops from LIB519 actually came and forced Zaai Aw
and his family to leave their house and land immediately and banned them from
taking anything away. Because they had no choice, Zaai Aw and his wife, their 2
sons and Zaai Aw’s younger brother, once again fled to Thailand. (Source: SHRF)

13.8 Situation in Karen State

"While the world welcomed the release of pro-democracy leader
Daw Aung San Suu Kyi on 6th May, the Burmese military were attacking villages in
Eu Tu Klo, Karen State. According to the Committee for the Internally Displaced
Karen People (CIDKP), the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) troops
burnt down a hospital, a workshop for the handicapped, a school and seven
houses. Around 500 people from Pau Kar Der internally displaced persons (IDP)
village and Kho Kay village were forced to flee to Thailand.

The 1 to 2 million IDPs, who are eking out a fragile and
uncertain existence in the jungles and mountains of Burma, remain in critical
need of food, medical care and education. In the month of March alone, over 30
settlements were reportedly attacked and torched. Saw Day Law, the Secretary of
the Karen Refugee Committee, described one of the attacks, "On 2nd March, the
SPDC troops came to my home village in Karen State, just a few hours walk from
the Thai border. The villagers tried to escape to the forest, taking with them
what they could. The military has stepped up cross-border security, making it
increasingly dangerous for the ethnic minorities to flee to Thailand. Those
caught trying to escape are often summarily executed or tortured and then
executed." (Source: CSW 8 May 2002)

Situation in Dooplaya District

"Most of 88 Division’s ten battalions arrived in the district
in January 2002, with orders to begin Operation Than L’Yet - a
traditional Burman four-edged dagger, a possible allusion to the Four Cuts
policy of undermining resistance forces by attacking civilians. Divisional
commander Brigadier General Ohn Myint established a Divisional Operations
Command at Kyaikdon and two Tactical Command bases (#882 and 883) at Wah Lay and
Azin, and his battalions were deployed throughout Kya In, Kawkareik, and Kru Tu
(Kyone Doh) - three of the district’s four townships. [These are the Karen
township names, not those assigned by the SPDC. The former Karen township of Kaw
Ta Hgah has been amalgamated into Kya In and Kawkareik townships.] While the
battalions previously based in the district continued to control their garrison
villages, the Division 88 troops began forcibly relocating all villages not near
Army-controlled villages and roads.

On February 28th they burned K’Toh Hta
village in Kawkareik township, and in early March they forced the villagers out
of nearby Seh K’Weh village without telling them where to go. In March, all the
villages in the Tee Po Than area of Kru Tu township were forced to move to the
vehicle road at Tee Po Than village, where Infantry Battalion 77 (part of
Division 88) now has a camp. They were forced to build a fence around the
village and they are not allowed out without a pass. Also in March, the five
villages of Tee Khu Thaw village tract in Kya In township were forced to move to
Tee Khu Thaw village, where Division 88 troops confiscated several plantations
and forced the local villagers to clear them and build an Army camp. All five
relocated villages were then burned by the troops.

Troops from the Division’s Tactical Command #883 in Azin
(a.k.a. Saw Hta) forcibly relocated several villages in that area, including Pa
Klaw Kee and Toh T’Naw Kee, and in July villages near the Thai border at Ber
Kler were forced to move to the vehicle road there. By the time these last
forced relocations occurred in July the rainy season had begun, and KHRG
researchers estimate that by then possibly as many as sixty villages throughout
Kya In, Kawkareik and Kru Tu townships had been forcibly relocated, displacing
at least ten thousand people. Kya In township has been the worst hit, with more
than half of all villages being relocated and destroyed. Most of the villages
still remaining are those positioned along SPDC-controlled vehicle roads or
adjacent to Army camps. Even in these villages, residents have been forced to
move their houses into a compressed area in the middle of the village where they
can be fenced in and controlled by the Army; for example, Tee Po Than village in
Kru Tu township has close to 200 families spread out in five sections, but most
of them have now been forced to move into the one or two sections of the village
closest to the vehicle road. As noted earlier, every other village in the area
has also been forced to move to Tee Po Than, leading to serious overcrowding and
shortage of land.

In most cases the troops either go to the village or summon
the village head to their camp, and order the villagers to move within one or
two weeks. If a column visits the village, the villagers are forced to the
church or the football ground and held there under guard while soldiers move
house to house systematically looting or destroying their belongings and
livestock. Closer to the deadline, a column goes again to the village. If some
villagers still remain there, village elders are arrested and tortured, houses
are burned, and the remaining villagers may be force-marched to a relocation
site. Eventually the entire village is burned or dismantled.

On May 10th, Paw Ner Mu village in Kya
In township was ordered to pay a bribe of 600,000 Kyat to Light Infantry
Battalion 301 or move; when they told the soldiers that they could not pay,
fifteen houses were burned and they were ordered to move to Meh T’Kreh within
fifteen days. On May 5th, a column from Light Infantry
Battalion 301 arrived at Tee P’Nweh village in Kya In township and told the
villagers they had seven days to move to Meh T’Kreh by order of Brigadier
General Ohn Myint. They burned three houses and a rice storage barn and robbed
several villagers at gunpoint. When they left they took three villagers and two
elders with them. Along the way one of the elders fled, but they took and
detained the others at Meh T’Kreh. On May 7th they brought
the elder back to Tee P’Nweh and told the villagers they must move by noon the
next day. On May 8th they returned and burned the houses
in the village. As they did so, Karen soldiers fired on them from outside the
village. As punishment, they [tortured the village head and left him to die-see
chapter on torture for more information]…At this point, those villagers who had
not already moved to Meh T’Kreh either did so, or fled into hiding in the
jungle.

Similar events occurred in several other villages. Many
villagers were arrested, detained for extended periods and tortured, including
women, adolescents, village heads and some Christian pastors. This occurred when
troops first came to the villages and were looting them, or when they came back
later and found that not all of the villagers had moved as ordered…The village
was visited again on May 13th by Light Infantry Battalion
301, who forced the entire village into the meeting hall and detained them there
with no food whatsoever until May 16th, when they were
forced to move to Meh T’Kreh.

On April 21st, a combined column of
Light Infantry Battalion (LIB) 301, LIB 416 and Infantry Battalion (IB) 78
entered Tee Tha Blu, [looted and burned houses and arrested and tortured some of
the villagers]. On April 27th, the troops returned and
burned the remainder of the village, told the villagers to get out but did not
tell them where to go.

Most villagers had little choice but to move to the
relocation sites or other SPDC-controlled villages, but some fled into hiding in
the jungle or tried to escape to the Thai border. After the village head of Tee
Law Bler in Kya In township had been given orders to move all of his villagers
to Lay Wah Kah, some people fled to other villages where they had relatives,
while others decided to make a run for Thailand. [Ten people including six
children were killed by SPDC troops while fleeing from Noh Ta Sghu and Meh K’Taw
villages, see chapter on execution] For those who choose to flee into hiding,
Dooplaya has fewer places to hide than some other Karen regions. Apart from the
easternmost regions adjacent to the Thai border, the three townships affected by
the operation are dominated by wide open ricefields separated by stretches of
forest, with winding rivers and low hills. Even so, many villagers are still
trying to hide near their fields or among the higher hills. The SPDC troops have
not pursued them extensively thus far, because up until the beginning of the
rains in June they were preoccupied with forcibly relocating and destroying
villages, and since that time their mobility has been somewhat limited by the
rains.

The last forced relocations occurred in July, and since that
time the operation has not been as intensive. Army patrols have continued to
comb the villages throughout the rainy season, and people hiding near their
villages have frequently had to run to avoid them, but those hiding in the more
remote areas have thus far escaped discovery. All of them are certain that if
seen they will be shot on sight. At present they are surviving on whatever food
they were able to salvage from their villages, and are trying to tend a rice
crop in their former fields or in small fields they have cleared at more remote
sites. They forage for roots and jungle vegetables, and some return to their
villages occasionally to harvest coconuts and other fruit from their trees, or
to tap rubber which they hope to sell.

The difficulty of finding places to hide has led most of the
villagers to move to the relocation sites as ordered. These are generally within
or adjacent to SPDC-controlled villages, usually along a vehicle road or major
oxcart track and close to an Army camp. Thus far KHRG is aware of sites at Kya
In ‘New Town’ (Myothit), Meh T’Kreh, P’Ya Ngote Doh, Wah Mi Gone, Lay Wah Kah,
Ka Lay Kee, Noh Taw Plah, Meh Ta Lah, Lay Taw Hta, Paw Wah Kee, Bee T’Ka, Nga
Pyaw Taw and Kyaw Kay Ko in Kya In township; Kyaikdon and Saw Hta (Azin) in
Kawkareik township; and Tee Po Than in Kru Tu township. At many of these sites
villagers have been forced to build fences around themselves, and their
movements are tightly restricted. They cannot go out without a pass, and even
with a pass are only allowed out from dawn to dusk. To prevent families from
fleeing into hiding, whenever someone goes out some of his or her family members
must remain behind at the site. Villagers are not allowed to return home to farm
their own fields because the SPDC believes that they would then supply food to
the Karen Army. Instead, most of them look for unused land near the relocation
site which they can clear for a hill rice field. The SPDC provides nothing
whatsoever to the relocated villagers, so most of them do not have enough food
and many are presently surviving on thin rice gruel made from the remnants of
the rice they could carry when forced out of the village, or on klih dtee,
a root which must be very well boiled before eating or it causes stomach
problems. As noted below, villagers in the relocation sites are used for various
forms of forced labour by the local Army units. Despite the movement
restrictions, some villagers have managed to escape the relocation sites and
have fled into the forest or toward the Thai border.

On April 6th the Bee T’Ka villagers and
those who had been forced to move there were forced to move again, this time to
Ko Kwa, while villagers at Dta Ghay were all forced to move into the centre of
their village. Since the forced relocations began, both local villagers and
those who have been relocated have been forced to work on these road and bridge
projects, and to provide road sentries on rotating shifts. These sentries must
build shelters at intervals along the road and are supposed to send a signal up
the line to the nearest Army camp if there is any suspicious activity on the
road. If any ambushes occur or landmines are found along the road, the village
providing the sentries is held responsible and punished, usually by being burned
or forced to relocate, or by having its elders detained under torture.

Villagers who have been forced into relocation sites usually
build huts, whether by choice or by order, side by side with others from their
village; thus, relocation sites tend to consist of a section for each village
which has been moved there, as well as sections inhabited by the original
occupants of the SPDC-controlled village. In demanding forced labour, the Army
and SPDC authorities still treat each as a separate village, even though they
have been forced together at one site with no land to farm…. On average a
village, whether it has been relocated or is still in place, has to provide two
or three people per day as messengers, two or three for camp labour, one or two
as camp sentries, ten or more as road sentries, three or four as porters, and a
few more for whatever other ad hoc labour may be required. When roads or
bridges are being built or repaired, one person per family is usually demanded
every day until the work is completed." (Source: Operation Than L’Yet:
Forced Displacement, Massacres and Forced Labour in Dooplaya District, 2002,
KHRG)

Forced Relocation in Karen State - partial list of incidents
2002

In May 2002, more than 300 refugees from Karen State,
opposite Umphang District in Thailand, arrived at Noh Poe refugee camp and were
accepted by the UN. Normally the acceptance of new refugees is strictly
prohibited by the Thailand. They fled the Burmese army which carried out "
Operation Sword " in which villagers were the primary target. Many villages were
forced to relocate. The Burmese troops also carried out mass killing in the
villages they reached. As a result, about 7,000 people from are homeless. Many
of them were blocked by the Burmese troops on their way to Thailand and remained
hiding in the jungles. (Source: Burma Issues)

Villagers Given 3 Days to Relocate

Sometimes, when the BA commanders ordered the villagers to
relocate from their villages, which were suspected as rebel base, if the
villagers delayed to relocate, they were punished or killed for their refusal.
In late May, when IB No. 77 arrived at Htee-pa-nae village, which is situated on
the Zami river, they accused that village of being used as a base by KNLA
soldiers. They ordered all villagers to leave their villages within three days,
and added that if they found someone after the deadline he/she must be killed.
On 1 May 2002 when the troops returned to that village, they found one family
who were still remaining in village. The heads of family are Saw Htee Paw and
Naw Nong Plae and they have 8 children and 2 relatives in their homes. Then the
soldiers arrested and interrogated them why they did not move from the village.
According to other villagers who knew them explained that they delayed in the
village as they need to tried to collect foods along with them. (Source: HURFOM)

Pa-an District

On 23 June 2002 commander, Pah Day of DKBA Myeing-gyi-ngu
Special Battalion summoned Kler-kat village head Saw Kya Maung to come to the
military camp at 12:00 pm. The commander accused the village head of not
informing him of the movement of the KNU. Saya Than Zaw Oo struck at his chin
with the butt of an M 79 grenade launcher and hit him many times on his back and
in the chest with rifle butt. Commander Pah Day then ordered Kler-kat village
and Htee-baw-khee village to relocate either to Klar-day or Mae-ta-poo village.
He threatened to drive them out from their village himself if the villages did
not go. (Source: KIC)

On 11 September 2002, combined troops from SPDC IB 24, led by
battalion second in command Sit Aung and DKBA troops, led by battalion
commander, Pah Day, who is responsible for the security of Myaing-gyi-ngu came
to Kler-ku village in Hlaing-bwe Township, summoned the village head and ordered
him to relocate his village near the motor road which was used for transporting
their food supplies.(Source: KIC)

On 6 October 2002, combined troops from SPDC IB 24, led by
battalion second in command, Major Sit Aung and Myaing-gyi-ngu DKBA security
unit, led by battalion commander, Pah Day, summoned the village head of Kler-ka
village of Kler-day village tract, Hlaing-bwe Township, to the army camp and
told him to relocate the villagers to Shan-yaw-thit motor road, which was used
to transport the military food supply. As a result, the villagers fled to the
jungle and survived as internally displaced persons. (Source: KIC)

Pa-pun District

On 14 March 2002, troops from SPDC IB 38 led by battalion
commander Min Aung combined with troops from SPDC LIB 308 forcibly relocated
some villages in Bu-tho Township. These included:

(1) Forced relocation of Htee-gi-lo villagers to Nah-kyauk
village,

(2) Wah-moe-lor villagers to Mae-mwe-hta,

(3) Htee-per-khee villagers to Nya-tay-lor,

(4) Wah-po-kha and Pana-kalaw villagers to Tkhu-yaw-klaw and

(5) Thwa-hta villagers to Wah-lu-klo.

The deadline for the forced relocation was 23 March 2002. The
troops also threatened that all of the houses and paddy barns of the villagers
who did not relocate would be burned down. In addition, the troops demanded 500
pieces of thatch from Tha-per-pah village and 500 pieces from Kler-si-kho
village. (Source: KIC)

On 6 May 2002, at 10:00 pm, troops from SPDC LIB 8, LIB 204
and IB 434, under Operation Command 441 having a total strength of 300 troops
came to Kho Kay village. On 7 May 2002, at 5:30 am, they burned down Kho-kay
village and as a result about 500 villagers had to flee into Thailand for
refuge. (Source: KIC)

Nyaung-lay-bin District

On 6 January 2002, combined troops from SPDC LIB 351 and a
SPDC guerrilla unit came to Ma-la-daw village and commandeered 20 bullock carts
from the village. In addition, the troops forced Ma-la-daw villagers to relocate
to the plains area. (Source: KIC)

On 6 January 2002, troops from SPDC LIB 351, led by major Tha
Aung, forced Maw-ket-tha-per-ko villagers of Mone Township to relocate to
Tha-byi-nyunt. Some villagers fled and hid in the jungle. On 8 January 2002,
these troops burnt down 38 houses in Kyaut-pya village of Kyaut-pya Village
Tract. (Source: KIC)

Nowadays, the villagers are moving to places the SPDC troops
designated for them. These troops forcibly conscripted 2 people from each
village in the plains region of Kyauk-kyi Township for the army. Pa-deh-gaw and
Mar-bee villages had already sent their quota of new recruits, but the villages
that could not provide recruits were fined 3,000 Kyat a person. (Source: KIC)

Doo-pla-ya District

At the beginning of 2002, Division 88, led by Colonel Ohn
Myint arrived in the Kya Inn Seik Gyi and Kawkareik areas. The troops under
Division 88 burned down six villages in April and May 2002. All of the house
materials and animals were looted and destroyed by the troops. Fourteen
villagers were shot dead and some villagers were severely tortured. Many
villagers are hiding in the jungle and plan to go to refugee camps or reside in
Thailand. Now they are facing serious problems with housing and food.

At present there are nine relocation sites in Kya Inn Seik
Gyi area and these sites are not well prepared; no clean water and no plans to
assist with building houses (even though it is late for villagers to collect
wood and thatches because of the rainy season.) Many villagers (even rich
persons) have became very poor within a month (from the middle of April to May.)

As a result [of the SPDC army campaigns], thousands
(estimated 3,000 - 5,000 villagers in the middle of May 2002) have become
internally displaced persons and are hiding in jungles. About 400 - 500
villagers reached the border area and are searching for jobs in Thai villages
along the border. . (Source: FTUB)

On 4 March 2002, combined troops from SPDC LIB 416, under LID
88, led by battalion commander Win Kyaw Oo and battalion second in command Aung
Soe Lin and troops from SPDC IB 63, led by battalion commander Min Naing and
battalion second in command Myint Thein Htun, having the total strength of about
370 men, burned down the villages of Htee-kay-ko and Thay-paw-oo-khee in
Kaw-ka-reik Township. A total of 30 houses were burnt down and the villagers’
paddy, rice, chickens, ducks, cattle and household items were either destroyed
or looted. Moreover, troops from SPDC IB 83 and LIB 416 seized villagers as
porters every day from villages of Sa-ka-wet, Aung-hlaing, Ka-to-hta and Nan-shwe-hmon.
Due to this, the villagers had to flee and hide in the jungle. (Source: KIC)

On 31 March 2002, IB (83) under control Division (88) led by
Myint Thein Tun summoned the Ta-po-hta villagers and gave the order to the
villagers to abandon their village and move to Ka-li-khee village within 3 days.
(Source: ABSDF)

On 31 March 2002, LIB (10) under the control Division (88)
led by General Mya Kyaw ordered residents of Noh-klo-ti and Htee-kya-ra village,
Kya-in township to relocate to Ywa-lon-taung village by 3rd
April 2002. (Source: ABSDF)

On 1 April 2002, column (1) commander Win Kyaw Oo, from IB
(83) under the control of Division (88) summoned villagers from Paw-thay-khee
village and ordered them to leave their village and move to the other place
within a day. (Source: ABSDF)

On 5 April 2002, IB (78) under Division (88) led by column
commander Win Kyaw forced residents of Pah-wa-klo village and Noh-taw-plo
village to relocate to Ka-li-khee village, Kya-in township. The next day, the
same unit burned down all the houses in Pit-ta-ka village and forced the
residents to relocate. (Source: ABSDF)

In April 2002, three KNLA soldiers were captured returning
home for water festival and tortured. As a result, troops from five battalions (IB
77, IB 78, LIB 301, 317 and 416) from Division 88 followed the three guerrillas
and arrested their relatives, friends and supporters, looted properties,
destroyed livestock and killed people. Because of this the villagers have been
fleeing into the forest. Rich villagers became poor within a few days. Villages
which were targeted by SPDC troops include:

(1) Meh Sa Kit (Meh Ku),

(2) Kyone Sein,

(3) Baw Kalo Khee,

(4) Noe Klo Tay,

(5) Kaw Keh,

(6) Mae Kaw Khee,

(7) Lay Kari,

(8) Htee Kapa,

(9) Kwan Thit Ta and other villages.

Thousands of villagers lost possessions and are now hiding in
forest without food, shelter or protection. Over 5 villages were burned down and
some were ordered to relocate (they can move to anywhere except their villages.)
(Source: FTUB)(See also torture chapter)

On 19 April 2002, troops from SPDC LIB 301, led by battalion
commander Htun Shwe forcibly relocate Kyone-sein village of Kya-in Township and,
as a result, the villagers fled either to nearby villages or into the jungle.
(Source: KIC)

Beginning from 19 April 2002, troops from SPDC IB 77, 78, LID
301, 31 and 416 under LID 88, entered villages in Kya-in Township and tortured
and killed villagers without reason. In addition the troops looted or destroyed
villagers’ possessions, and killed and ate livestock such as buffaloes, cattle,
chickens, ducks etc. As a result, hundreds of villagers had to abandon their
land and plantations and either go into hiding in the jungle or flee to the Thai
border for safety. Villages targeted by SPDC troops included Kyone-sein,
Theh-pyu-chaung, Htee-tha-blu, Noh-klo-ti, Khaw-kher, Mae-kaw-khee, Lay-ta-ri,
Htee-ka-pa, Htee-pa-nwe, Mae-pra, Toe-doh-net, Kwan-thit-ta, Paw-neh-moo,
Htee-law-bleh, Htee-blay, Ka-kya-po-khee, Htee-kyaw-kay and Baw-ta-low-khee
(Source: KIC)

On 23 April 2002 troops from SPDC LIB 301 came to Khaw-kher
village and arrested the village head and 3 other villagers and took them to the
Army LID 88 headquarters in Kyaik-don. They were not released up to this day.
Moreover, these troops ordered villages namely Khaw-kher, Htee-ka-pah and
Htee-kyaw-kay villages to relocate to Kya-in, Kyaik-don, Mae-ta-klet and
Paya-ngote-toe within 2 weeks. They destroyed the villagers’ houses, household
materials and food store. Thus, the villagers had to face a severe shortage of
food, shelter and clothing. (Source: KIC)

On 5 May 2002, at 2:00 pm, the SPDC unit from LIB (301) led
by Min Din, Column (1) commander, set fire to and destroyed the homes and/or
belongings of residents from Htee-P’-Nwai village, Kya-Inn township. Residents
who lost their homes and or belongings include:

The SPDC troops destroyed everything that they found in the
villagers’ houses. In addition, the soldiers pointed a gun at one villager. Naw
Hsaw Aye, and grabbed 1 gold necklace and a pair of gold earrings that she was
wearing. The soldiers also forcibly relocated Htee-P’- Nwai village to Mae-tae-klae
village. There are approximately (90) dwellings in Htee-P’-Nwai village.
(Source: ABSDF)

On 10 May 2002, troops from SPDC LIB 301 led by Min Din
burned down 15 houses of Paw-ner-moo village, because the villagers could not
pay a sum of 600,000 Kyat demanded. They also ordered Paw-ner-moo villagers to
relocate to Mae-ta-kret village within 2 weeks. (Source: KIC)

On 12 May 2002 SPDC LIB 301 battalion ordered Htee-kay and
Ta-kya-po-khe villages to relocate to Si-hson village in Kya-in Township.
(Source: KIC)

On 13 May 2002 at approximately 10:30 am, LIB (301) Column
(1) under Division (8) arrived at Kaw-keh village, Kya-Inn township, and killed
1 cow. In addition, they also looted and destroyed the villager’s rice crop. The
villagers were forced to flee to avoid from the SPDC troops. (Source: ABSDF)

On 2 June 2002 it was reported that Burmese soldiers had
killed at least five people and set fire to ethnic Karen villages in new raids
on separatist rebels along Burma’s border with Thailand, refugees said today.
Thai officials said more than 700 Karen had fled to Thailand from 22 villages in
the Kyar Inn Seik Kyee township in Burma. The township is about 25 miles from
the border. Hundreds more refugees are believed to be making their way through
the jungle to Thai territory. The refugees began arriving in small groups last
Friday in the Umphang district of Thailand, about 120 miles northwest of
Bangkok, the border officials said. One villager, Naw Mu Nuei, 63, said Burmese
troops accused the villagers of backing the rebel Karen National Union and
ordered them to leave the area before May 21. When the villagers defied the
order, troops detained them at a local church for four days, beating some of
them before driving the group into the jungle and setting fire to their houses,
they said. (Source: Associated Press)

On 5 June 2002 Min Din commander of SPDC LIB 301, issued an
order that Ka-la-pa-sote village located by the side of Za-mi river to relocate
to the village of Shwe-po-hat-ywa-thit, in Kya-in Township by the end of June.
(Source: KIC)

On the night of 8 June 2002 troops from SPDC IB-77 ordered
Kya-ka-wa (Sa-ka-wat) and Ka-toh-hta villages in Kaw-ka-reik township to
relocate to Aung-lan village. Moreover, these troops looted 15 baskets of rice
and 17 chickens from Kya-ka-wa village. (Source: KIC)

On 8 June 2002 troops from SPDC IB-77 burned down two houses
and 3 paddy barns at Thon-ein-zu (Teh-thon-lone) in Kaw-ka-reik Township.
(Source: KIC)

On 12 October 2002 at 7:00 am, about 20 troops from SPDC IB
588 under No 19 Military Operation Command, led by battalion second in command
Aye Lwin came to Bi-saing village in Win-yae Township and handcuffed Saw Kyaw
Bwe, aged 37, and took him to the battalion headquarters. As of 7 October 2002
the troops were continuing to detain him and had subjected him to torture in
many ways, accusing him of having contact with the rebels. For this reason the
villagers became very terrified and fled to other places. (Source: KIC)

On 12 October 2002 about 20 troops from SPDC LIB 588, under
Local Military Operation Command 19, led by battalion second in command Aye Lwin,
came to Be-saing village, Win-yae Township, and handcuffed villager, Saw Kyaw
Pwe aged 37 and took him to the army camp and tortured him up to this day. These
troops accused Be-saing villagers of having contact with the rebels. As a
result, the villagers took fright and went into hiding. (Source: KIC)

Tha-ton District

On 3 June 2002 Maw-ple-khee camp commander Bo Khin Zaw Win of
SPDC LIB 1 ordered villagers living in Maw-pli-khee area and nearby places to
relocate to Maw-pli-khee village by the dead line of 10-6-2002. He threatened to
take action against villagers who failed. (Source: KIC)

Toungoo District

On 16 March 2002 SPDC troops summoned village heads in
Baw-ga-li area for a meeting. In the meeting, Der-doh village head failed to
attend and as a result and they showed a bomb of RPG launcher, a round of G-3
riffle and a piece of charcoal to the others village heads who came and said
that they would kill all Der-doh villagers they found. In addition, they issued
an order to ban villagers from Klay-soe-khee and Baw-ga-li villages of east Pa-leh-wah
area not to travel. (Source: KIC)

13.9 Situation in Other Areas of Burma

There is little information available about the situation of
IDPs in other areas of Burma, such as in the Chin and Mon States, and many of
the Divisions, as the plight of these people has not been well documented.
However, it is known that there is a significant population of IDPs in these
areas, as villages have been relocated in the past, relocation sites exist, and
the conditions which push people out of their villages have been documented.

Situation in Chin State

There is little information available regarding internal
displacement in Chin State, and the true scale of the problem remains unknown.
However, estimates by The Chin National Front (CNF), a pan Chin nationalist
movement, report that widespread displacement is a major problem in the area.
CNF estimates that there are 40-50,000 persons in Chin State who have been
displaced from their homes. Many of these people have reportedly fled to Mizoram
State in northeast India.

Situation in Kachin State

"While the situation of internal displacement is not reported
and hence the scale of the problem not well known in Kachin state, 30 years of
internal conflict between the various Kachin independence movements and the
Burmese army has resulted in large-scale displacement of the Kachin population.
Figures from Kachin State suggest that perhaps 100,000 were forcibly relocated
from their homes by counter-insurgency operations between the 1960s and 1990s,
while other estimates suggest that in 1994 - prior to the signing of a
cease-fire - there were around 67,000 internally displaced. More recent
estimates suggest that although conflict-related displacement has decreased, the
impoverishment of many rural dwellers following three decades of strife have led
to significant rural displacement. As no peace dividend followed the cease-fire
agreements, leaving the issue of resettling previously displaced groups obscure,
many rural populations in Kachin State have become landless and forced to seek a
livelihood in the extractive natural resources (mining) sectors or in the
service sector in urban areas.

Indeed despite the negotiated cease-fire arrangements between
the central govemment and the Kachin Independence Organisation (KIO) and the
Kachin Democratic Army (KDA) there continue to be problems of displacement and
land confiscation. As has been remarked by numerous civilians in Kachin State,
cease-fires have allowed the different armies to retain their arms and
territory, controlling and taxing the populace, while basically prioritising
business for themselves through the extraction of natural resources. These
complaints are not solely levied at the cease-fire groups, but more importantly
at government, as the army has claimed much farmland, principally to grow food."
(BERG September 2000, "Kachin State")

Tenasserim Division

SPDC troops forcibly relocated more than forty houses at a
place between Taung Tho Lon and Heinda Chaung, in the east of Tavoy, Tenasserim
division, to construct a new artillery battalion. On November 27, 2002, Col. Soe
That, commander of No.1 Strategic Command based in Myitta village, ordered the
villagers who lived in the place between Taung Thon Lon and Heinda Chaung
villages to move out of their houses, plantations, and lands. It was estimated
that more than 300 acres of land would be cleared up for the building of that
artillery battalion. All the villagers’ lands and plantations in that area were
confiscated without any compensation. Starting from the end of 2002, the Burmese
troops have been planning and building more artillery battalions and anti air
craft battalions in Tenasserim division. (Source: KHRG)

Rangoon Division

Residents Evicted, Detained

A one thousand member force of army, riot police and local
police raided a residential neighborhood in Rangoon’s Kamaryut Township on the
night of April 5th, according to a Rangoon resident. As authorities began
destroying homes and detaining residents, an elderly woman yelled at the
security forces, calling them robbers, said an eyewitness. The destruction and
arrests follow the refusal of the residents to obey an order issued by Col Yan
Naing Oo last month. He ordered the twenty-five families of Kamaryut’s Waggi
quarter to evacuate and move their homes by April 5th or face arrest.

Several residents spoke openly last week while using their
real names during interviews with the Washington-based Radio Free Asia (RFA)
Burmese service. The interviews were later broadcast into Burma. Security forces
demolished seven homes and detained the residents and their children.
Authorities later separated the children and the adults before sending both
groups to different detention centers. The government also sent doctors and
nurses to the scene to take care of the sick and elderly, according to the
source. It is not known how many people have been apprehended or where they are
being held. Officials ordered the remaining families to vacate their homes by
April 7th, the source added.

Included among the detainees was Daw San May (pen name Shwe
Gu May Hnin), an author and elected Member of Parliament from the opposition
National League for Democracy (NLD); U Win Pe (pen name Maung Swan Yi), a
respected critic and poet; Yin Yin Myint, a teacher, and U Sai Hla Kyaw,
according to a report from the Burma Media Association. The government did not
give any reason for the forced eviction, according to several Waggi residents.
But a former Waggi resident, who sold his property to a business interest two
years ago, reported that a deal between investors and local authorities was
behind the order to relocate the neighborhood.

The forced relocation of some Rangoon neighborhoods has taken
place since the 1988 democracy uprising. Several neighborhoods, which were vocal
in their opposition to the government, have been relocated to areas outside of
Rangoon for security purposes. Other forced relocations in Rangoon have occurred
to make room for well connected business interests. In the rural areas, forced
relocation is a commonly employed military tactic to cut support for ethnic
insurgents. The forced relocation has received criticism by Burmese activists’
abroad. Yesterday, Burmese activists in Washington, DC gathered in front of the
Burmese ambassador’s house to protest the government’s action. (Source:
Irrawaddy)

Junta Demolished Homes

Dozens of houses have been demolished and at least 13 people
were arrested-including three children-in Rangoon’s Shwe Leikpyar quarter, also
know as the Zay Kalay quarter, near Rangoon University’s Kyee Myin Daing campus
earlier this month. Residents of the neighborhood told The Irrawaddy that the
demolition had been ordered by the government to make room for a new apartment
complex. According to eyewitness accounts, an estimated 30 men from the
military, local police and the junta’s de facto political party the Union
Solidarity and Development Association (USDA) descended upon the quarter on June
10 and notified the residents that they had 24 hours to move all their
belongings from their homes.

The residents said no explanation was given but that those
who did not cooperate would be arrested."They did not want to go, but they were
given no choice," said one resident whose home is just outside of the demolished
area. He added that he thought the government might compensate the residents. At
least 13 people were arrested after authorities raided the neighborhood, which
is in Kyee Myin Daing Township, on June 11 and found them still in their homes,
according to a member of the National League for Democracy (Liberated Area).
Among those arrested were three members of the opposition National League for
Democracy (NLD) as well as three children.

NLD (LA) secretary U Nay Win told the Washington, DC-based
Radio Free Asia (RFA) that the residents and their children are being detained
at Insein Prison and the Htaung Kyant interrogation center, both in Rangoon. He
added that they have been charged under an obscure 1962 housing law. Shortly
after the raid the NLD’s headquarters in Rangoon released a strongly worded
statement condemning the junta for carrying out such unwarranted and illegal
acts. In April, thousands of riot police and local police raided the Waggi
quarter in Rangoon’s Kamayut Township and demolished 25 homes. Homeowners and
their children who refused to vacate were also arrested. Under Burma’s military
regime, forced relocations in urban area have become commonplace. The
relocations are often times ordered to eradicate what the government sees as
subversive cells or because of business interests. Resident normally receive no
compensation from the government. (Source: Irrawaddy)

Seized Land Sold

Only a month after residents were forced from their homes,
Shwe Than Lwin Company has purchased the vacated real estate from authorities.
Last April, 25 homeowners and their families in Rangoon’s Waggi quarter of
Kamaryut Township were told to relocate, although no reason has been given by
the authorities. Some Waggi residents were detained for over a week for speaking
about their relocation on Radio Free Asia broadcasts. Shwe Than Lwin Company is
a large investment and import company, led by Kyaw Win. They are engaged in
business with some ethnic ceasefire groups, particularly the DKBA. Authorities
said they would give evicted homeowners an apartment room and 100,000 kyat as
compensation. But these would be in remote areas, making transportation
difficult. (Source: AP)

13.10 Interviews

(All interviews conducted by FTUB)

Name : xxxx

Age : 56 Years Old.

Nationality : Karen

Residence : Htee Khu Thaw, Kyar Inn township, Karen State.

Date: 16 March 2002

"There are about one thousand families in Htee Khu Thaw tract
(Day Law Ni, Ler Kaw, Tha Wal Pa Doe, Htee Saw Shee and Htee Lor Thei War
villages), Kyar Inn Seikkyi township, Karen State. Since early 2000, the SPDC
has disenfranchised our villagers in Htee Khu Thaw and set up a military base
there. The army confiscated several plantation yards on which they built their
camp. At this time, hundreds of villagers have fled to hide in the jungle in
exile. Although some families are still living in their villages, they are doing
so for the sake of keeping their fields farms.

One of the battalions from Division 88 is based in our
village. They usually have cooperated with the Karen Peace Organization (split
from KNU) led by Tu Mu Heh.

There are some bridges on the road between Kyar Inn Seikkyi
and Kawkareik. In 2001, we (villagers) were warned that the bridges must not be
destroyed. If the bridges were ever lost, the villages nearby would be
relocated.

Between January to March 2002, some of the bridges were
destroyed by forest fire. At this point, troops controlled by SPDC division No.
88 and Karen Peace Organization cooperated to begin a process of forced
relocation and labour in rebuilding.

The army demands villagers be porters every day. Each day, at
least 2 people in my village must leave and work for at least 2 days. If the
village heads cannot find someone to replace the villagers after two days work,
villagers are not released and must continue until someone else comes to replace
them. Villagers are forced to carry soldiers’ backpack filled with shells,
bullets, and food. Often times, the weight of the pack exceeds 15 viss1. Most
the time they return, villagers have wounds on their bodies. In 2002, villagers
also have been forced to reconstruct army camps. Those villagers had to do labor
including:

-Making fences for the military yard.

-Collecting fire wood.

-Digging trenches.

-Making bamboo traps around the army yard.

One person in each family is called without fail for camp
reconstruction.

All the villages in Htee Khu Thaw tract have been forced to
relocate to the Htee Khu Thaw village by the SPDC troops and the Karen Peace
Organization troops. Villagers became unhappy, so some attempted to leave,
especially those who do not own land.

After villagers were relocated, the troops destroyed our
houses. Most villagers

thought that the troops would sell the land, or use it for
themselves. Making a plan to get to the Thai-Burma border was very difficult
because we were afraid the troops might overtake us along on the road. It took 6
days to walk from our village to the border. Some villagers who came later told
us that some villagers were overtaken by the SPDC soldiers and the DKBA. The
SPDC would have beaten the villagers, but the DKBA kept them from becoming
violent". (Source: FTUB)

"I am from Ta Aia Shie village. We along with another family
secretly left our village and came up to the Thai-Burma border. We were the only
2 families to leave. In the beginning of 2002, the bridges between Kyar Inn
Seikkyi to Kawkareik were destroyed and the SPDC started their operation of
forced labor. Currently the SPDC troops patrol our village tract. In our
village, SPDC soldiers demanded three porters at a time, each had to spend three
working days. At the end of 3 days, the village head had to replace them with
other villagers. But the troops also capture villagers to be additional porters.

In February 2002, I was arrested by the combined column of
SPDC soldiers and the Karen Peace Organization. I had to serve 4 days as a
porter and I escaped. When I was in porter service in February, I saw prisoner
porters being treated terribly by the troops. They were beaten and kicked. Each
porter had to carry a load of at least 12 viss weigh. Loads contained food,
shells, bullets, etc. Along the operation path, if the troops saw and wanted
something from any villagers, they looted it from them and gave it to the
porters to carry. When I reached home, my wife and I discussed and decided to
leave. We have been living here for weeks." (Source: FTUB)

"When the DKBA split from the KNU, I was 15 years old then
and I joined the DKBA. During my service in the DKBA in March 1998, our Elite
Squad (27 persons) was ordered by General Kyaw Than (DKBA) to destroy the Huay
Kaloke refugee camp together with the 999 Brigade. I was given not only a rifle
but also a pressurized gas bottle (octane gas) and a lighter to ignite it.

Weeks later, we were ordered to destroy Mae La refugee camp,
together with 70 DKBA soldiers led by Moe Gyo. Burmese soldiers (SPDC) guarded
us but they did not cross the Thai border. During the raid, we were only able to
burn down two houses from Mae La camp. One DKBA soldier was killed, and one was
injured, so we withdrew. Even though our families and relatives resided in
refugee camps and villages (both Thai and Burmese sides), we must follow orders
came from SPDC.

Then, I was transferred to Thaton district as a guide for the
SPDC 44 Division together with DKBA officer Moe Gyo. While following with DKBA
officer Moe Gyo (meaning Thunder in Burmese language), we had to kill many
villagers, using the charge against them that they were KNU supporters. While
patrolling with SPDC soldiers, we were forced to march in front of the column.
If they instructed us to collect porters or to burn down villages, we had to
comply. Even though I was an elite force officer, there was no salary given to
me. We were issued two condensed milks tins (one tin costs 250 kyats). Months
ago, we were told we would get 50,000 kyats a month, but we still have not
received it.

Thus, when we returned from Thaton district, my colleagues
and I began to rob around Hlaing Bwe township. Later, I was shy and embarrassed
when I met villagers we robbed. Villagers knew of me as a robber and probably
thought of me as an enemy, but they never told me this directly. Instead, they
followed my orders. This year, we were ordered to burn down several houses by
the SPDC and I was wary about that.

When our troops guarded for the SPDC column at Htan Hna Pin
village, I heard that my parents from Kyar Inn village, also from Hlaing Bwe
township, were called to serve as porters in February 2002. I asked permission
to free them from having to serve as porters from the area commander, Maj. Tin
Win, Battalion 2 of the DKBA 333 Brigade. He said he could not because the SPDC
column had demanded to collect porters. I then proposed that I resign from my
service with DKBA. The argument turned bad and I shot him dead with a pistol.
Then I was suspended and detained by DKBA headquarters’ troops.

On March 6th, I told my Sergeant who I
had commanded (Ka Tone Gyi, alias I Love You {See Torture chpt}) to prepare for
my escape. At dinner, the sergeant put sleeping drugs in curry and all the
guards fell asleep. At 2 a.m., two of us took guns from 27 soldiers who were
sleeping and stole a new Toyota 4-wheel truck owned by General Kyaw Than. (His
car was sent to inspect road construction.) I drove the car while the sergeant
sat in the back with a machine gun. We drove towards Dawna range from the east,
and when we reached the bottom of the hills we left the car. Then we brought
guns and ammunition we could carry and then reported to the KNU local
authority." (Source: FTUB)

------------------------------------------

Name: xxxxx

Age: 57 Years Old

Religion: Christian

Residence: Htee Tha Blu, Kya Inn-Seik Gyi twonship.

Sex: Female

Occupation: Farmer

Date of Interview: 18 –5-2002

"There are 30 families in my village. Our village is situated
in a remote area as well as quite far from SPDC troops base. So when SPDC troops
arrive at our village, they act very violently. On the third week of April, the
SPDC troops led by Myo Tun Hlaing arrived and accused our villagers that, "You
are Nga Pway, you must relocate immediately at once." And then the troops
ordered all villagers including children to enter the church. And the troops
locked the doors. We had to stay in this church three days, they did not give
any food to us except the children. Children were fed once a day, although the
food for the children was not enough. The troops gave a little water to drink.
When villagers went to the toilet, soldiers followed and pointed at them with
their guns. While villagers were detained in the church, the troops burnt down
our processing and rice barns completely.

On 27th April, we were called to go outside of the church and
then it and a public hall were burnt completely. The SPDC troops took four men
from our village with them. Those four men were interrogated and tortured by the
soldiers before they took them away. We did not dare to watch when the soldiers
tortured them and we felt very sorry for them. One of them was a pastor, another
one was a medic (who had a medic certificate issued by SPDC), and two other were
villagers. Among the four, one of them (a villager) managed to escape but the
other three were not released. After Division 88 soldiers left, we (villagers)
dispersed to Paw Neh Moo, Toe Doe Neh and into the forest. The troops destroyed
everything. Even the rice pots were punctured and small chickens killed even
though they did not eat them. We (three families) crossed the jungle to the
Thai-Burma border." (Source: FTUB)

-----------------------------------

Name: xxxxx

Age: 60 Years Old

Religion: Animist

Residence: Khar Kla, Kya Inn-Seik Gyi twonship.

Sex: Female

Occupation: Farmer

Date of Interview: 17 –5-2002

"There are 30 families in my village. They are farmers. Our
village tract was controlled by Division 88, stationed in Azin village. The
troops demanded us to work on the bridges in Kyaik Don, to repair an army camp
in Azin village, to serve as porters to go with them as they desired. We tried
to do our duty as ordered by them.

But on April 11 to 14, about 70 soldiers from Division 88
came to our village tract, burnt down some villages and forcibly relocated some
villagers from some of the villages. The belongings of villagers were taken away
or were destroyed completely. The villages are Na Htee Klo, Thee Kweh, Noh Kwe
Hta and Ta Ray Khei. Each village had between 25 to 30 families. Some villagers
fled away when they heard that the troops would come to relocate the villagers
and to burn down their villages. Some are still staying in their villages.
During April and May some villagers moved to the Thai-Burma border and some were
still staying in the jungle with poor accommodation. After my house, rice barn
(170 baskets, for one year’s stock) and my belonging were destroyed, our
families had a discussion and came to Thai-Burma border." (Source: FTUB)

Htee Moo Hta Area, Thingan Nyinaung, Karen State

On 13th March 2002, village elders from Htee Moo Hta (Outer
Kwin Galay), Noe Poe(Inner Kwin Galay) and Meh Kaneh villages were called to
attend a meeting in Htee Moo Hta village. Here, army officers from SPDC and DKBA
told them that all of the villagers from the three villages must relocate to
other places between the 20th to the 25th of March, 2002. If the villagers
refused to relocate, they would be severely punished and their houses and
property would be burned down. As the villagers were too afraid of SPDC and DKBA
soldiers, almost all villagers arranged to move to other places. Many people
went into the forest, while some went to the Thai-Burma border.

"Our family made the decision to move to the border with 40
other people. Some young male villagers who were very angry were seeking Karen
guerrillas, as they wanted to join the KNLA", reported one villager."

Note: According to the KNU source, Methamphetamine
smuggling route from Kawkareik to the Thai border passes Htee Moo Hta village
and KNU guerrillas have been trying to block the route at Htee Moo Hta area.
Thus, SPDC and DKBA soldiers (who protect drug smugglers) have tried to relocate
the villages.(Source: FTUB)